No, I read two of them in a single chapter in Yumi and the Nightmare Painter which is what reminded me.
No, I read two of them in a single chapter in Yumi and the Nightmare Painter which is what reminded me.
Brandon Sanderson loves the word adroit.
The book was fascinating. I actually read it at the same time I read “I’m Glad My Mom Died,” and it was interesting how both Britney and Jeanette were abused by their parents, manipulated by their employers, and how multiple adults could have stepped in and didn’t.
However, I definitely think Britney’s limited education came through in the book, and she also seems to have mental issues exacerbated (but not necessarily caused) by the abuse she suffered at her family’s hands. The story about her driving a car on a cliff with her boyfriend, escaping the paparazzo by executing a turn that could have killed them and having her justify it as “we should be able to make mistakes, even risky ones” makes me think she’s not mentally all there.
You certainly can’t compare trauma and Jeanette suffered physical (and probably sexual) abuse rather than financial but Jeanette seemed like a much more reasonable person.
I am definitely NOT advocating for the type of oversight her dad forced on Britney (in addition to forcing her to perform) but she needed a psychiatrist before she even became a child star.
I won’t buy a book unless it was really significant or I think someone else in my house will read it.
He used it twice in one chapter in Yumi and the Nightmare Painter, which was released this year.