"Dream More" is an expanded version of a commencement address Dolly gave at the University of Tennessee in 2009. Using anecdotes from her own humble beginnings and eventual success story--and her trademark self-deprecating humor--she encourages her audience/readers to always strive to dream, learn, care, and become more.
I picked up this quick read on a recommendation from book blogger Anne Bogel. Bogel recommended the audiobook, and it's true, this would have been fun to hear in the voice of the author herself, and yet the print version still manages to be a pretty entertaining and engaging read. Should Dolly Parton quit her day job to become a full-time writer? No. Does she know that? Yes. Does she manage to come across as wise, witty, and pretty wonderful anyway? Yes, yes, and yes! I've been a Dolly fan since watching "9 to 5" repeatedly on HBO as a 7- or 8-year-old, so I was predisposed to like this. Back then, I didn't really understand that movie, or Dolly, on all levels, but I knew she had a kind of energy that I was drawn to. That energy comes through loud and clear in "Dream More." This book is Dolly being Dolly, in all her gaudy, God-loving glory. As she writes about working toward dreams, at times, she comes across as borderline cocky. There is humility in her, but no false modesty. She readily owns the fact that she worked really hard for her success. Actually, I think that deep self-confidence is a big part of what draws people to Dolly. And you know, it's hard to mind her confidence or her success, when she has used them to do so much good in the world, through her Imagination Library and related initiatives. Another appealing Dolly quality that comes through in "Dream More": She is real about being fake in certain ways. In a curated, Instagram-perfect world, she says, what you see when I'm in public is a persona. It's nipped. It's tucked. It's drag. The reality is something different. The same quality comes up in the section called "The Truth, Dolly Style," in which she answers questions she gets asked repeatedly. Her answers all deflect, deflect, deflect, away from who she really is and what she really thinks, albeit in a charming way. In the body of the book, though, Dolly does offer a generous glimpse of who she is at her core...and it's inspiring.