"Review of Autobiography of a Face" | 2009-11-09 |
| - Reviewed By helloflcl |
Autobiography of a Face was Lucy Grealy's first book and an inspiring insight into her battle with cancer, and life in the years afterward. The majority of the story takes place during her earlier years of life intermixed between her suburban home and hospital care.
From the science side of things, not much information is given about her cancer or the biology involved with it. But, the book gave me a clearer understanding of what it's like to live with cancer. The detailed descriptions of the pain and suffering involved through chemotherapy treatment was something you can't get from a purely informational source, and I believe the book's emotional vie of cancer helped with my understanding of specifically Ewing Sarcoma Tumors and other types of cancer as well. When compared with the technology available at the time of her diagnosis and the aspects of Ewing sarcomas in general, Lucy's story is truly remarkable. EWS are very rare, and the chance of survival, especially at the time, make Lucy's case even more of a miracle.
Because Lucy Grealy's cancer scarred her teenage years the most, I was able to place myself in her position and imagine being treated the way she was. I admire her strength and courage to face the dramatic world of high school, day after day while people constantly criticized her facial scarring. I also admire her ability to control herself so well while in immense pain. I would never be able to keep a complacent composure while receiving chemotherapy. I also admire her strive to surpass physical beauty, by understanding the true inner beauty in seemingly ordinary things.
|
| |
"Good potential, poor execution" | 2009-08-23 |
| - Reviewed By ilovebooks from ny |
I really wanted to like this book. I had become interested in Lucy Grealy's life after reading her friend Ann Patchett's book, Truth and Beauty, an excellent thorns-and-all memoir on Lucy and their friendship. I also am interested in body image issues, so I thought I'd love this one.
This book had great potential--Grealy has quite a story to tell. Diagnosed in childhood with a rare and often fatal form of cancer, she triumphed only to face disfigurement when the cancer caused her to lose part of her face. She then had to deal with surgery after surgery to fix her disfigurement, and none of those surgeries seemed to really work. She is teased by children, must deal with the possibility of never falling in love, has a family tragedy in the middle of it all. Most horrific is that Grealy got hooked on painkillers and died less than a decade after this was written.
And yet...this memoir is incredibly boring. Grealy keeps us at arm's length, rarely letting us in on her emotions. Most of the time, she focuses on the gruesome medical details of the operations. (Don't read this while you're eating.) Or she'll write about something that happened to her and at the end of it, you'll go "What? What does this have to do with anything?" I don't understand how you can make such an interesting life so boring, but somehow, Grealy manages it. I hate to write a bad review, because she led such a tough life and you've got to give her props for getting through that, and this book is not without some literary merit, but this is not the great memoir it could have been. If you want to know more about Grealy, I would go with Truth and Beauty, literally one of the best books I've ever read.
|
| |
"Raw" | 2009-06-12 |
| - Reviewed By A. Thompson |
Grealy is honest without being sorry about it, and amazingly doesn't come across as feeling sorry for herself at all. In fact, she told her story with candor and dark humor.
I didn't like it as well as Truth & Beauty - Ann Patchett writes in a style I prefer, and she was easier to relate to in general, since she's more like all of us than Lucy Grealy ever had the chance to be.
Nonetheless, Grealy's autobiography was moving, and a worthwhile read. |
| |
"I' will always cary this story with me" | 2009-04-10 |
| - Reviewed By Bookd from USA |
| I first read this book upon it's release, back when I was in high school. I had read Lucy's essay Mirrorings, and was so taken with her story that I devoured this book in one sitting. I have read it countless times since, and always recommend it time and again. Something about the ugliness of the cancer, Lucy's suffering, and the cruelty she encountered because of her disfigurement really resonated with me. I wondered how life could be so cruel, to afflict a young child with that kind of suffering, and then to have to suffer the cruelty of being put down and made fun of. It is heart-wrenching, and sadder still to know that Lucy never escaped her demons. After years of failed surgeries she succumbed to a drug overdose. Who could judge her, after reading her story? |
| |
"A Beautiful Person Battles Her Physical and Psychic Scars" | 2009-04-02 |
| - Reviewed By Fairbanks Reader from Fairbanks, Alaska |
Lucy Grealy writes poignantly and poetically about the way her battles with cancer of the jaw have affected her life since childhood. This autobiography chronicles her surgeries, struggles, denial and, finally, acceptance of herself as the mirror of her face. Facing things might be an apt metaphor here.
The metaphor of face, along with her identification of self as she deals with the ravages wrought on her face, are examined from many different vantage points. At first, Ms. Grealy is in denial that she has become different looking. She then avoids any acknowledgment of how she's changed post-surgeries.
The story shows no self-pity. Rather, she shares the evolution of her life, family, and growing self-awareness in a chronology of events marked by treatments and surgeries. This is a beautiful book!!!! |
| |
"Heartwrenching, beautiful and memorable!" | 2009-03-13 |
| - Reviewed By Angel Cake Monkey from San Jose, CA |
| The tone of the book is what I will carry with me. She writes with such a lonely, depressing perspective and yet, her beautiful, small intricate details of life carried the story. It was hard to put down, hard to read at times with the vivid detail of chemotherapy, but will be one of my favorites. It has some fun and funny passages, and I am sorry she is no longer here in this world to talk about her experiences. |
| |