My church preaches and lives out grace, so I already technically knew the wonderful, solid truths about grace that Ruth Chou Simons presents in this book. What she did was connect them for me--connect them to my life and my very specific struggles. She did so by sharing her own struggles, and it was frankly uncanny just how much I could relate to her-- how I interpret life in the same skewed ways, despite not coming from the same background. The deep sense that this woman understands me to my striving core prepared my heart to receive, with full attention, the Gospel of grace from her words. I underlined almost every word in several chapters, just because she wrote down my own thoughts for me. When she gave the Lord's answers to those thoughts, boy was I ready to hear it.
Her ability to connect the grace of God to my specifics has made a deep difference in my life. I was able to discern and let go of what makes me resistant to grace, and I feel an abiding peace from finally receiving these truths that have been faithfully preached to me for years. It's made even a physiological difference, loosening my shoulders and jaw and causing my husband to comment, when I asked if he could feel the difference that I felt, that I seem "calmer at meals."
The book's pace is meditative and it leans memoir-like at times. Sometimes I had a hard time connecting her anecdotes to the truths that followed them, but her vulnerability still bore good fruit. Forever grateful for this book, which will live on my shelf of honor henceforth (unless it is being read again).
Edit: Update -- I scrolled through the reviews and read a few of the bad ones. Most of the bad ones say that this is a fluffy feel-good book that says nothing about the Christian duty of obedience. I'd just like to state here that these women did not read the book carefully, or perhaps didn't finish. In any case, their statements about "no obedience here" are just laughably untrue. There is a whole chapter dedicated to it, "Grace Fuels Our Good Works." Here's an excerpt: "There's an active verb in there. 'So walk in him' is a direct command. Notice Paul didn't say, 'Therefore relax.' . . . Grace is not the reward in itself; knowing Christ is. Grace simply makes it possible for you to stop striving for yourself and strive out of love for God instead. Grace isn't an excuse to be lazy or apathetic about the marks of a Christian life. Rather, it is the catalyst by which we partake in it" (147). I don't know how much clearer Simons could be.