Reviews tagging 'Injury/Injury detail'

All My Knotted-Up Life: A Memoir by Beth Moore

4 reviews

beklovesbooks's review against another edition

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5.0

Just excellent. Ties together well. Humorous and intense. I feel we really know the author through her vulnerability and style.

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beklovesbooks's review

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adventurous challenging dark emotional hopeful reflective sad medium-paced

5.0

The author is such an excellent storyteller,  gifted with words, so you can feel everything with her without it being graphic. So much truth, tragedy, trauma, raw, honesty, faith & hope.

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purplepenning's review

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emotional hopeful reflective medium-paced

4.75

Astonishingly good and highly recommended. Full of grace, vulnerability, charm, and humor. Also excellent on audio. 

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mrswhiteinthelibrary's review

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challenging emotional inspiring reflective sad fast-paced

5.0

Beth Moore: once the Evangelical church's only real woman darling, now a sort of delightful auntie of exvangelival kids everywhere. This is her story. And it's a ride. Written with her trademark, folksy southern warmth, she weaves the story of her troubled childhood, a story of abuse, mental illness, and tragedy, with the story of what Jesus did for her, his presence always felt but always seemingly behind the curtain, behind the scenes. As she grows older, marries, starts her ministry, builds her family, and grapples with her past, Moore never loses sight of who has carried her, even as trauma dogs her every step, from birthing her children, adopting a small boy from a cousin (who later chose to return to his birth family), she and her own husband's PTSD, and her ejection from and rejection of evangelicalism in the wake of Trump. This is not a preachy book. In many ways it reminded me of works like Educated or The Glass Castle. It is Beth Moore's life, and while her faith is intrinsic to that, she writes in an accessible manner, acknowledging often only in past tense what she sees as the invisible threads holding it all together, only seen from the distance of time. She stands in awe of making it through it all, never praising herself (her tone is, in fact, often one of self depreciation). It reminds me of how readers of Charlotte's Web are less wont to praise Wilber as "some pig," and instead remark, "what an amazing spider."

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