3.5 stars
How do you rate a biography? “Sorry I didn’t like your life story” as opposed to “Great life story” ? Haha.
I didn’t expect the book to be outstanding, but I did expect it to be better. It was very interesting, just not entertaining. It listens better than it reads, for sure.
I rated it so low for a couple of reasons.
First, I felt there was plenty of family/friend information which could have been reserved for an “Unabridged” version. I literally would zone out, and the names would get confusing to me because she mentioned. So. Many. Family - and so. Many. Friends/Colleagues. For a wider audience, perhaps mention important relationships which shaped you. I get it, you don’t want to leave anyone out, but just an idea. Maybe I’m just not used to biographies like this.
Second, the pacing was off to me. I didn’t feel like I was really enthralled in the story until she got to My Fair Lady, because it felt like a distinct chapter of her life. Then there was a lull, and then Camelot. The beginning was very sequential, and then once she came to the USA, topical. She began the story by being very specific about how old she was, who she was with, what came next, how she was feeling… and then when she is in the US, it switches, and there would just be facts, like where she lived, what she was doing, who she was dating, and I would ask “How old were you Were you still homesick?” Stuff like that. I felt that shift, and maybe it was on purpose to not divulge certain info, I get it.
Things I enjoyed:
- Listening to her read it
- Learning about her early years in a raw and unashamed way
- Where it ends, before her Hollywood years; very well done
- Little stories which add suspense and humor
- When she gets deep about how she’s feeling
She seems very humble and genuine to me as she tells her life story. I’m believing the best in her, but I’m so curious about who she really is. She still seems a little guarded to me.