sfletcher26's review

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4.0

An interesting and frank biography of one of the UKs leading contemporary artists.

myliteraryshelf's review

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challenging emotional informative medium-paced

3.0

jemimaslife's review

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2.0

2.25 stars. There's no way on earth I would've read this book if is wasn't required reading for my course. I had dreaded starting it & then had hope for it & then didn't & then did & then didn't. The ending was abrupt & made me feel like I'd wasted my time reading it. I am glad it wasn't any longer because of this. Disappointing structure & a writing style that I simply could not gel with.

pehall's review

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5.0

Brilliant

debumere's review

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3.0

Although I didn't know much about Grayson Perry's childhood before I read this, when I did read it I felt like I'd heard it all before. The best bits for me were when he became a student and dossed about around London. Quick read and interesting enough. I have bought the first novel written by the person who wrote this book.

rex_libris's review

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4.0

Candid and deeply entertaining this is a book to be devoured. Taking his Turner Prize nomination and win as the point of departure, we aren't offered the story of Perry's rise to fame and success. Rather Jones offers us tales from his childhood, life as an art student and young graduate from recorded interviews she and Perry had made years earlier.

Presented is an opportunity to get to know Perry as he is learning to understand himself; as an individual, as an artist and as a transvestite. Depending on who you are and how deeply you engage it could be a window, a doorway or a mirror into the worlds Perry inhabited on his way to being a Turner Prize winning artist.

Perry's voice speaks to us in an erudite manner, confident with wit and humour. The narrative of his formative years and experiences unfold in digestible moments to be savored and enjoyed. There are tales of joy and comfort but many of them are coloured with anxiety and pain. Perry sets them down with thr forthright honesty of a man unashamed of his desires, actions and experiences.

This is where my ambivalence kicks in in. For me, what I enjoyed and found to be the great strength of this book was this forthrightness but perhaps it was also the weakness. The honesty in places felt as though it started to build into a romanticism of 'this is where I came from; this is where I've been' - a blunt and uncritical confession. Perhaps I wanted some deeper reflections, something better and beyond the moments of commentary. A better use of his past than what at times felt like a sloppy and sentimental romp.

[b:Grayson Perry: Portrait Of The Artist As A Young Girl|961537|Grayson Perry Portrait Of The Artist As A Young Girl|Grayson Perry|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1320488723s/961537.jpg|946438] is a short and satisfying reading. I was disappointed when it ended simply because I wanted it to be longer, to go further. It's not everything that I wanted but it is enough. It is a book I can see myself returning to again, hopefully to add colour and insight to other writings on the artist.

nialexieva's review

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4.0

one star off cause this was way too short!!
Other than that, this was absolutely delightful. I saw a review which talked about how the lady had just read Just Kids and how different the experience of reading this was and that is literally what I was thinking the whole time. Perry has a very different tone when it comes to the way he describes his relationship with art and other people, taking on a very self-analytical approach, especially tying most of his actions and attitudes to his past trauma. I just wish he went a bit more in depth about the onset of his art career, but then again this was mostly a memoir on his years growing up rather than his life. Still loved it though!
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