Three and a half stars. This is interesting to understand better a woman for whom Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida is named. I have heard that the students learned well how to speak out in support of a cause, and it's clear that this woman also was more than able to do this.
As for the literary quality of this autobiography, it's about a 2.5 stars--it meanders, has holes in it, references people for two lines and then they disappear with the next point unrelated to the one before, chronology is in general the only propulsion forward, and there is little effort to confirm statements made about which the author is clearly uncertain. So why at least a 3.5? It's interesting to see how this woman lived a life that, for the most part, she chose. She chose not to be married again after an unpleasant experience in an early marriage, she speaks relatively freely about sex, she worked most of her life, she traveled quite a bit with a variety of companions, and while she seems to speak frankly, she doesn't seem to take herself too seriously or hold herself out as anyone extraordinary. Her work (her writing and activism) was clearly ground breaking at times and her determination to help in early environmental movements was useful and important, especially in relation to the Everglades.
In some ways because her writing is not polished, it reads more like you might imagine a conversation would flow, and it made me wish I had lived near her and was a friend who could come over for tea and a conversation. The narrative also shows a way of life where this was part of life--the human connections that don't seem as important or common these days seem much more an integral part of everyday life.
Only two things made me pause--she seems to take for granted (or it may be the style of her writing) that she was quite fortunate to have people in her life who left her inheritances that allowed her to do the things she wanted to do. The other is that she had a number of manic episodes that seem very intermittent and don't in other ways seem to affect her life. I wonder if that is an eliding of other kinds of problems that she experienced or if these were so disconnected to other aspects of her life that they came essentially out of nowhere, were "treated" and went away, and then otherwise she was unaffected by mental health issues. This book is very descriptive rather than reflective at a deeply emotional level, so my guess is that there is more to the author than she reveals. It would be interesting to read a biography of her to compare characterizations.
Overall, I'm glad I read this. It wasn't in general a "page-turner," but I did find myself wondering what she would do next and that was enough to keep me going; the last quarter of the book was more focused and helped compel me forward more than the random people and events that populate most of the book.