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reflective
fast-paced
reflective
slow-paced
emotional
reflective
slow-paced
emotional
informative
sad
medium-paced
slow-paced
This is not a bad book based on it message but it is quite lackluster based on it's formatting or the way it's been held together.
I thought it might have been the translation but now I think it's the editing. The book reads like diary pages interjected with transcript of therapy sessions and I say transcript and not dialogues because the writing of these therapy conversation has no tonality. It is quite dull and doesn't convey the mood or emotion at all, which is why the sudden burst of tears in the conversation feel abrupt and unfounded. These parts of the book read as more clinical. As for the remaining they read as disjointed diary entries not a book with one flowing theme or conversation. This is most apparent in the last paragraph or the Postscript of the book. It is very apparent as well when the note about the Lee-Younghak assault case is followed by a chapter "I Don't Look Pretty" or having an Epilogue followed by the Psychologists note, followed by the Postscript. It does not seem like much thought was spared on the arranged on the conversation in this book.
Sehee definitely has something to say but it was never put in the form a book, and I don't mean a conventional one either. This is mostly diary entries interjected with transcript of a clinical conversation. It is quite surprising that the book suffers from woes of bad editing when we learn throughout the book that the author has been an editor professionally.
I thought it might have been the translation but now I think it's the editing. The book reads like diary pages interjected with transcript of therapy sessions and I say transcript and not dialogues because the writing of these therapy conversation has no tonality. It is quite dull and doesn't convey the mood or emotion at all, which is why the sudden burst of tears in the conversation feel abrupt and unfounded. These parts of the book read as more clinical. As for the remaining they read as disjointed diary entries not a book with one flowing theme or conversation. This is most apparent in the last paragraph or the Postscript of the book. It is very apparent as well when the note about the Lee-Younghak assault case is followed by a chapter "I Don't Look Pretty" or having an Epilogue followed by the Psychologists note, followed by the Postscript. It does not seem like much thought was spared on the arranged on the conversation in this book.
Sehee definitely has something to say but it was never put in the form a book, and I don't mean a conventional one either. This is mostly diary entries interjected with transcript of a clinical conversation. It is quite surprising that the book suffers from woes of bad editing when we learn throughout the book that the author has been an editor professionally.
emotional
reflective
medium-paced
inspiring
reflective
fast-paced
challenging
reflective
medium-paced
emotional
reflective
fast-paced
challenging
emotional
informative
inspiring
sad
medium-paced