A fast read. For the first few chapters, I was like: Is this book for adults? I admire beauty entrepreneur Mally Roncal, but the writing is immature, like it's written for grade level 5.
The first seven chapters are really short and preachy, titled with a piece of advice or lesson, such as "Treat Everyone like a Superstar," "What makes you different makes you beautiful," "Live without regrets," "If It Doesn't work, Let it Go," "Bee Calm," "Believe in happily ever after," "trust your gut." She writes about how great her life is, how perfect her parents were in raising her, the lessons they taught her. Which is fine, if she didn't include all the trite phrases and aphorisms.
Every chapter ends with something like "Trust, believe, and don't try to control what you can't control. Don't panic!" I'd rather she just get to the part about her life, the obstacles and successes, and not hit us over the head with these "lessons." The one about "Bee Calm" is literally about life being like a bee buzzing around you. "When a bee comes around--when there is chaos or something scary comes your way--instead of screaming or running, just be still and what is meant to be will be." This is seriously presented as mind-blowingly wise advice that her dad gave her. (Seriously? When a bee or wasp is bothering me (like when I'm eating outside), I whack it, and kill it).
I wanted to learn about her rise in her career to become a celebrity make up artist. How did she start? Finally in chapter 8, she tells us, and the book got meatier after that. Then, ch. 13 starts to tell about how she created her own makeup line, and I liked this part.
Disappointingly, I didn't discover anything new from the makeup tips and advice, and would've liked it better if she had photos of herself with the different makeup looks, rather than drawings.