I’ve really enjoyed all three volumes of Gildiner’s life. Sure thought of herself as an oddball, but I loved her spunk from the first page of Too Close to the Falls. This is the third and final book she writes autobiographically, and I’m so glad I got over myself and read them. (I loved her book Good Morning Monster, except for the many repeated references to her memoir, and so I resisted reading them for several years. I was also surprised she would call a three-book reflection a memoir, especially since they chronicle her life ages 4 to 27.)
Volume one, Too Close to the Falls, was very charming. Volume two, After the Falls, was both traumatic and scary. This last one was more mature, more fun, and bittersweet. Dr. Gildiner had lived several lifetimes by the end of this third book. She also had a lot of adventures and run ins with celebrities and very notable people, including Marilyn Monroe, one of the first women to help other women access abortions before they were legal, there DuPont family, the FBI, Bill Clinton (he always makes net feel icky just by saying his name - ew!), Jimi Hendrix, and more.
I’m even more impressed by how much education she got. Under grad in Ohio and at Oxford, graduate school for Victorian literature, and a PhD in psychology from Canada. All this before the end of this book when she’s only 27. I was exhausted just reading about all her schooling.
One thing she got wrong. She said of the US presidency, "even if you get a total lunatic running the asylum, it will only be for four years." So wrong. We have 45/47 as proof of that, and if he gets his way, it'll be 47 until he dies...(why won't he choke on a hamburger already????).
Thoroughly enjoyed all three books. Would like to see if I can find a copy of her fiction Seduction.