Reviewing the hardcover edition though it seems to be absent from the list.
Oh dear, where to begin with this book. Ok, I'll be kind and start with some positives. 1. There are some lovely black and white photographs of the tidal pools Bromley visited 2. There are sparse moments of poetic description that are really beautiful and inspired. Annnnd that's all I can manage with the positives. Here come the negatives.................
1. When I read a book on tidal pools, wild swimming and grief, I don't expect to be regaled with details of someone's itchy fanny due to being fingered by their boyfriend, and then listening to the internal debate over whether it is thrush or bacterial vaginosis!!! Honestly, I shit you not! There is some serious oversharing in this book that Bromley needs to have a word with herself about!! No-one wants to know mate! Same with the vomiting in a bag after a massive hangover. Grow up!
2. The self-aggrandizing. Despite the supposed self-agonising over her life, Bromley thinks very highly of herself and it bleeds onto the pages. "My mother is gorgeous, she has passed that beauty onto me"... Really, and so modest Freya?!!
3. The double standards. She bemoans the men in her life at times, moaning about what they don't/can't give her, but is actually two timing two (fairly decent sounding) men, all the while trying to decide which would be more beneficial to her! Eugh! Fuck right off.
4. Her behaviour towards her family comes across as quite twatty. All the family have lost someone, a son/brother/twin but Bromley comes across as "it's all about me"!! Her sister is virtually ignored for the whole book then is lauded at the end in a seeming lip service.
5. The book is way too long at nearly 450 pages. She needs an editor. I SAY, SHE NEEDS AN EDITOR!!!
I was not impressed with this book. The title is just an excuse for Bromley to talk about herself and expose aspects of her life that no one is really interested in. Perhaps she should have stuck to poetry.