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Killing Esther

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"I think there's something wrong with me."

My sister has lost the roundness in her face that has plagued her so since our trip to Sweden to visit our mother's birthplace. And she hardly takes up the little space between my chest of drawers and her side of our closet. She seems disturbed, in need of my sympathy, which I am quick to give though I have only two ugly dresses in that closet, her hand-me-downs, while her side is crammed with pretty little skirts, cashmere turtlenecks and buttoned-down blouses from Plain & Fancy. Esther is and always will be the favorite, and that's okay with me. But Esther is disappearing.

Esther was 16 when she began her descent into the madness of self-starvation, but her self-destruction didn't begin there. Our parents had laid the groundwork for her neuroses with years of histrionics and melodrama long before Esther considered her first calorie.

Killing Esther is a tragicomic tale of a toxic childhood. It is a bold memoir that is sometimes maddening, sometimes amusing, and will stay with the reader a long time after the last page is turned.

Alternate Cover Edition for ISBN13: 9781457533976.

148 pages, Paperback

First published May 7, 2011

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About the author

Susan Shepherd

14 books10 followers
Susan Shepherd is a retired law enforcement officer who has spent most of her career interviewing criminals and writing reports for the Court. She lives on the North Fork of Long Island with her husband, three horses and four cats.

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
3 reviews1 follower
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September 23, 2018
Being able to follow because I was there for the later years of Esther's tragic end I found it heartbreaking all over again. Although I don't remember the timeline the same way Susan does, as I am her outcast bff "Kris". Happily I didn't know that until now so that's okay. We had a long friendship that I wouldn't change except the part that the Urciola boy was too bright for me. Susan wasn't really interested in him anyway. I couldn't have ostracized Susan a month before our graduation, as I graduated early in January and wasn't there. I was and am of much better character than that. People do grow apart but I was still around when Susan went to Binghamton and when Esther past away. This is Susan's story of her family's trials. I was just a part
and I hope mostly good. Cheers to your success, healing and happiness. You are thought of often. Love, Kris.
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98 reviews23 followers
February 19, 2014
Killing Esther is a dark, edgy memoir that penetrates your porous bones and leaves you chilled to the core. There are many stories of childhoods gone awry, of innocence lost, but nothing quite like this one. Between these pages lies a story of survival, familial discord, and an illness so toxic it infects everyone it touches. How could you not resent the sister who, when you were only four years old, convinced you to jump in a hole so that she could leap onto your back and leave you with two sprained ankles, tear-stained cheeks, and no comfort in sight? Ever since she was a child, Susan Shepherd has known that her sister is trouble with a capital "T." Esther's caustic words are the bane of her obsessive, perfectionist mind. Sweetness oozes from her pores, but the bitterness lurks deep inside. Despite Esther's anorexia, life goes on. Despite the fact that Esther is slowing starving herself until her bones poke through her skin, until she is so far gone that she cannot be saved, life continues. And Susan? She'll be left to weather the storm and pick up the pieces of the sister who faded away.
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1,209 reviews78 followers
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September 18, 2015
DNF at 50%. With all due respect to Tolstoy and his famous quote, I'm starting to think that unhappy families are pretty much alike as well. There's only so many ways to be dysfunctional after all. But the reason I've decided to DNF this is because I'm not much of a fan of memoirs where authors describe detailed memories and conversations from early childhood (in this case, age 6 and below up to where I stopped), and the writing's kind jumpy.
19 reviews
October 7, 2013
A powerful story told by a powerful voice. I truly enjoyed the style of Susan Shepherd’s writing. The violence was actually fascinating to watch unfold and only because of the way she described it. It’s a harrowing memoir that reads like entertainment, like something between a dark comedy and a neighborhood thriller. I enjoyed it from beginning to end.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews