Adult Braces
Driving Myself Sane
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4.0 • 15 Ratings
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- $15.99
Publisher Description
A NATIONAL BESTSELLER
In New York Times bestselling author Lindy West’s ambitious memoir, she brings readers along on an uproarious cross-country road trip as she unpacks her last few tumultuous years, rediscovers herself, and reinvents her marriage in the process.
Through Shrill—the book and then the Hulu series—Lindy West became an inspiration. To this day she is stopped on the street and hailed as a beacon of empowerment by women who felt badly for not conforming to a narrow set of societal norms—thin, straight, compliant. But behind the scenes, Lindy never felt like she was the self-actualized woman fans made her out to be. When she found herself in the throes of a deep depression, with her marriage and sense of self-worth hanging in the balance, she knew she needed to make a change.
In Adult Braces, Lindy shares the story of her rock bottom, and of the journey she took to claw her way out of it. With her trademark candor and sense of humor, she examines her post-Shrill emotional implosion, her shifting feelings about traditional marriage, and her search for her long-lost self. She also tracks the highs and lows of her journey, from eye-opening natural wonders and kitschy roadside attractions to lackluster tourist traps and campground epiphanies.
The result is an engaging and laugh-out-loud narrative of becoming as Lindy transforms from a passenger into the active navigator of her own life.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
Author Lindy West takes you along on her journey of transformation in this triumphant, funny memoir. A self-described loud, fat woman, West became an icon to many with her sensational 2016 memoir, Shrill. She was in the midst of a depressive episode and grappling with her husband’s desire to make their relationship polyamorous when, oddly inspired by the Beach Boys’ 1988 hit “Kokomo,” she decided to set out on a road trip from Seattle to the Florida Keys and back. As West chronicles the 7000-mile odyssey, she deals vulnerably with her depleted self-esteem—something that certainly isn’t helped by her husband introducing a third partner into their relationship or by having to wear the book’s titular orthodontia. But she arrives at some pretty stunning insights, often completely offhandedly. Whether you’re new to West or a longtime fan, you won’t want to miss this leg of her journey.