One day back in November, on my commute to work, I heard Rachel Levy Lesser on the Mom's Don't Have Time to Read Books podcast and loved every minute of her interview. When I got to work, I immediately went on the author's website, began reading her essays, and was even more intrigued. But then my busy schedule got in the way and it wasn't until this quarantine that I ordered and read this book. I knew even before I opened it that I would love it (something about the bubblegum pink cover and whimsical drawings).
I truly feel as if I just spent a long day with a friend, digging deeply into our lives. Lesser's memoir is told in that no-nonsense, conversational tone that makes it look like it was easy to write. But any writer knows that it's incredibly hard to conquer that concise writing style that delivers so much emotion without being sappy or cliche. Each chapter of the book is framed by a single fashion accessory that has been meaningful to her at some point in her life. The fashion angle is subtle, though, letting the real story be about the relationships, emotions, fears, and experiences of her life. College, sleep away camp, dating, careers, marriage, kids. . .she tackles it all, including the heart wrenching grief of losing someone close to her. As she tells the specific details of her own path, her words are like invitations to open up thoughts of similar stages in your own life, and I found myself lost in personal memories and reflections.
Life's Accessories kept me entertained from start to finish. I could have read many more chapters of Lesser's insightful, humorous, touching stories.