“I think it's a good thing to find hope where any other person would agree there was none.”
Many thanks to Penguin UK for sending me a free, finished copy!
Well, this book was emotionally exhausting. It was also both heartwarming and heartrending.
Beth's story starts with her at prison for doing ‘a bad thing', and her believing that there's barely anything good about her or her life now that she committed something so horrible. After a small introduction about her current situation and surroundings, she takes us back to her past and all the way through growing up and becoming who she is now. As a kid, she has suffered, been abandoned once and twice, and used; which only added more reasons to why she despises herself so much.
The chapters/chapter titles are a number of things that Beth simply finds good—from reading a book to someone, to sharing silence with another—which she has been listing down as a way of therapy. Through these good things, we get exposed to who she used to be and her past, her life as a child, a teenager, and an adult, as well as how she became who she is now, and eventually, that one bad thing she did, and the reason behind her doing it.
There's a line in the book that said (about one of the characters):
“She had so many people.”
Well, 'All the Good Things' had so many people and so many stories within its pages, and thats exactly why i absolutely enjoyed the book. It told so many stories, yes, but it never got messy, which is something that i personally find hard to master in a book. The chapters were rich with details, events and situations that i couldn't help but soak them all in.
The idea behind this story is without any doubts different than anything that i've read before, and it did keep me both interested and intrigued, although i was more interested in the stories of those people and its characters than intrigued by that one bad thing.
'All the Good Things' talks about family, friends, hardships, moving forward, loving one's self, and how to stand up every single time you fall down, and most importantly, how one should never give up hope. And through all of this, it takes you on a swirl of emotions and teaches us how to be understanding, compassionate, and strong.
It did take me a while to get into the book, i have to admit, but once i did, i couldn't stop reading until i knew everything and all of Beth's stories.
“I like how books let you into another world, but how it's secret. Like, when you read, the world you see is different from the one someone else sees when they read the same words. It's just yours.”
One more thing that i can't help but shine some light on: this book in it's own special way—Beth's love of reading and books—reminded me of why and how much i love reading. It spoke the feeling of utter happiness of holding a book and having books to read in it's own words to me, and that made me smile more than once. And this, this is when you know that a book is special.