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Shaparak Khorsandi

Auteur de A Beginner's Guide To Acting English

4 oeuvres 261 utilisateurs 12 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Comprend les noms: Shappi Khorsandi

Œuvres de Shaparak Khorsandi

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Khorsandi, Shaparak
Nom légal
Khorsandi, Shaparak
Autres noms
Khorsandi, Shappi
Date de naissance
1973-06-08
Sexe
female
Nationalité
Iran
Lieu de naissance
Tehran, Iran

Membres

Critiques

Oh my word! Where to start with this one - it has to be the funniest yet saddest book I have read all year. We all like a drink now and again, and we've more than likely all had that one drink too many where we don't remember how we got home yet wake up in our own bed. In Nina is Not OK, Shappi Khorsandi has written a dark and brutally honest account of one young woman's battle with alcohol. Seeing the effects on Nina's family will, I'm sure, make some people think twice about having 'just one more drink'.

Nina, at 17, is at the in-between age of child and adult; she thinks she's old enough to make decisions but she doesn't realise that her mum still knows best. She lives with her mum, Sandra, step-dad, Alan, and half-sister, Katie, who she adores. After reeling from the break-up with her boyfriend, Jamie, Nina turns to alcohol to drown her sorrows. On a night out with her friends, Beth and Zoe, Nina gets thrown out of a club and ends up going home in a taxi completely out of her head with her knickers in her hand. Nina can't remember what happened but thanks to the wonders of social media a video gets posted to fill in the blanks.

Nina's mum is at her wits end, having seen the devastating effects of alcoholism when she was married to Nina's dad, who unfortunately died. So when Alan gets offered a job in Germany they arrange for Nina to live with her friend Beth and her dad, Max. Max is unable to cope with Nina's binge drinking so Sandra returns from Germany to put Nina in rehab. As Nina gets the help she needs, she realises that she's not to blame for what happened that night and she didn't ask for it. There's only one problem, the guy she was with that night, Alex, is now going out with her friend, Zoe.

So raw, emotive and powerful, Nina is Not OK is as addictive to readers as alcohol is to an alcoholic. Written with such honest humour that you laugh at times and then guiltily realise that it's really not funny, not for those who live with alcoholism. When Nina bumps into the kitchen wall, I was reminded of a scene in Absolutely Fabulous when Edina and Patsy visit a vineyard in France and Edina complains that someone has stolen her steering wheel. It's that kind of brilliantly dark humour. I would definitely recommend Nina is Not OK to all book lovers - it's one of the best books I've read this year.

I received this ebook from the publisher, Ebury Press, via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
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Signalé
Michelle.Ryles | 5 autres critiques | Mar 9, 2020 |
I listened to this in audiobook format, narrated by the author herself, and I'm really glad I did.

This is quite an intense read and I did find some parts hard to get through. This book deals with themes such as alcoholism, sex, consent, rape, etc so it's not exactly a light read. Khorsandi treats these subjects with the brevity they deserve, but injects a tone of flippant (?) 'humor' that adds an interesting tone to the experiences of Nina. I found all the characters extremely believable and their opinions all clash with each others in really interesting ways.

Ultimately I consider this book worth the read, maybe just prepare yourself for some heavy scenes
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Signalé
LiteraryDream | 5 autres critiques | Sep 30, 2018 |
Read this in one sitting with my heart aching. Nina is definitely not OK, she's not one of those girls who can go out for one drink, she is all or nothing. The question is what happened last Saturday night? This book deals with the most harrowing subject matter with great humour but never diminishes what's actually happening. It should be required reading in schools across the country.
 
Signalé
angelaoatham | 5 autres critiques | Feb 21, 2017 |
Don't be misled by the light, chatty tone. Protagonist Nina Swanson, 17, sounds upbeat and snarky as she laughs off the horrific things that happen to her while she's drunk (what a funny story! I'll tell my grandkids about this! not everyone has such a wild night!), but this novel is no apologism for sexual abuse — as much as it may initially come off as a comedy.

It's Nina's last year before university, and she's set to soar through her A levels — but soon her plans are blindsided by her parents' decision to move to Germany, leaving her alone and drinking her way through a traumatic breakup. The book follows Nina through her self-destructive spiral into alcoholism, the denial, and eventually her realization that she is not OK. Fast-paced and horrifying, it's a gripping story. Set today, the novel shows the unspeakable horror of misogyny meeting technology, and author Shappi Khorsandi deftly avoids blaming Nina for men's choices, though there does seem to be an undercurrent of "not all men," which I could have done without.

(Sadly, the unfortunate term "slut-shaming" crops throughout the novel, and it's depressing to see this woman-hating buzzword yet again replace language actually articulating male violence. I felt the sane sadness and disappointment to see it show up in Monica Lewinsky's TED Talk. When men exploit vulnerable women, who are then then publicly crucified, it has nothing to do with a "slut" being "shamed.")

Added bonus: I had no reason to expect the protagonist would be anything other than straight, so it was a nice surprise to see Nina come to terms with her bisexuality throughout the course of the novel.

Note: I received an advance reader's copy through NetGalley.
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Signalé
csoki637 | 5 autres critiques | Nov 27, 2016 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
4
Membres
261
Popularité
#88,099
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
12
ISBN
12
Langues
1

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