Nancy G. (ComfyReader) reviewed The Gift of an Ordinary Day: A Mother's Memoir on + 330 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 8
What began as a book that I had looked forward to reading, quickly turned into a book that I thought would never end.
Like Kenison, I too was having a child go off to college and another starting high school, a job in transition, financial instability, the prospect of selling a home and moving into a new area. I felt that finally, a here is a woman's book that I could relate too. But, unfortunately, this memoir has shown me that no two people live the same life. There was no learning or empathy for what she had gone through. Her bemoaning grew tiresome and quite irritating when she put more pages into a friend with shingles that needed her , which I still question, then into a friends child that was killed. The balance just wasn't in this book.
Though memoirs can be a bit self indulgent, this one rattled on a little too long . What exactly was Kenison trying to convey to the reader. That you too, while living under someone else's roof can send your children to private schools and build the home of your dreams. Sorry, but the oh poor me attitude was totally lost on me.
Like Kenison, I too was having a child go off to college and another starting high school, a job in transition, financial instability, the prospect of selling a home and moving into a new area. I felt that finally, a here is a woman's book that I could relate too. But, unfortunately, this memoir has shown me that no two people live the same life. There was no learning or empathy for what she had gone through. Her bemoaning grew tiresome and quite irritating when she put more pages into a friend with shingles that needed her , which I still question, then into a friends child that was killed. The balance just wasn't in this book.
Though memoirs can be a bit self indulgent, this one rattled on a little too long . What exactly was Kenison trying to convey to the reader. That you too, while living under someone else's roof can send your children to private schools and build the home of your dreams. Sorry, but the oh poor me attitude was totally lost on me.
Helpful Score: 4
I am not really sure how to rate or review this book. The book seems to ramble. At times, it is also a bit preachy. Yet, parts of it and the idea of it really touched my heart. It seems to flow as a "stream of consciousness" from one thing to another. Yet the central ideas of longing and growing are constant. The ideas for me win out and make it a memorable book.
Helpful Score: 2
This book addresses where I am in my life right now which is why I liked it. I don't think that anyone without teen-agers would find it as compelling. Yes, there is all sorts of "smell the flowers" and "don't sweat the small stuff" and "be the journey, not the destination" wisdom in here, but the author is at her best when she wraps those philosophic pieties in her actual experiences.
Helpful Score: 1
I enjoyed this book very much. The timing was just right for me - she is a woman about to turn 50 and facing letting go of her boys and looking for what brings her joy. Excellent read!