There's a lot of tea flooding out from Utah this morning.
The book's been out for roughly 9 hours at the time of this writing, and there are already people on reddit complaining that it doesn't have any "gotcha!" moments, but I'm not sure those people and I are reading the same thing...because there's some definite zingers in here. (They're all spoilers, so forgive me if I'm vague here.)
If you're a "Sister Wives" watcher who reads this book, you're probably going to fall into one of two camps:
1) the side who reads it avidly and with semi-warm feelings for Christine, who will find lots of little places where things you saw in the show suddenly have some context, and you will want to light Kody's little curlicue demon horns on actual fire once you realize he's been a giant douchecanoe since roughly day one, and,
2) the side who reads it avidly with no great like for Christine, who will think it didn't go far enough and will gripe about everything she says, picking it apart so it fits your narrative better.
Either way, it'll be loads of fun for you, even if #2 is wrong. :D
Because here's the thing: it's a book, and a story, about a human. Humans aren't just one-dimensional, perfectly logical creatures. There's going to be conflicting emotions about things like a culty upbringing and a thirty year marriage to a narcissist. A human being can know intellectually that their idyllic childhood was in the confines of a belief system that wasn't all that great to other humans, and that your grandfather was murdered by psychotic brainwashed women in plyg buns....but still revere the sense of family and love they experienced within it. That's not being duplicitous or delusional or lying...it's being human. Same with knowing your self-absorbed, misogynistic husband is a giant loser dickweed, but also acknowledging that you loved him and sometimes (rarely) he was a good father. The two aren't mutually exclusive. You can have both emotions/reactions/opinions.
So if you're unable to give Christine the grace of being human, you're probably going to end up in Camp Two, ruthlessly picking it apart while simultaneously griping that she didn't give enough details. Just so you know that before you pick it up.
But for those of us in #teamChristine, there are a LOT of details in there that we didn't know for sure. That we speculated about, but didn't have official confirmation of -- some of which are enough to write off the manipulative self-styled power couple and book them a one-way passage to a planet full of alligators and no hair gel or bad cruise ship art.
I'm sure there's more than is even here, since she IS still employed by TLC, and has to be a tiny bit careful not to stomp all over production's toes. Be prepared in advance to skirt around those kinds of things, because I'd rather not have some details if it means Christine's not getting sued by the network...and cross my fingers that once the show ends for good, those kids are going to get reeeeal open, reeeeal fast. (tiny not-all-that-spoiler for example: that last few pages where she mentions that Mykelti is estranged from the dastardly duo? I want more about this. WHY? WHAT DID THEY DO?? I'm hoping the omission of explanation is because it'll either be on-screen next season or on-page once the kids start writing their own accounts. I. Am. Intrigued.)
Anyway, the TL;DR of this is twofold: first, I'm a nerd who watches like three reality shows and apparently is reeeeaally into this one, moreso than even I thought I was, and two, that it's a satisfying companion to the show and contains a few good bits that should have been in the tell-alls of the relevant seasons, if the producers weren't so bullseye-ed in on telling a certain story.
It's worth a read for watchers, and is probably a wee bit specific for non-watchers, but is still wholly entertaining.