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The Monster That Ate My Mommy

par Jessica Aiken-Hall

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Mothers are supposed to love their children unconditionally, but what if they can't? "Your own mother doesn't love you--what makes you think anyone else will?" These words haunted the author and affected every decision she made. If she wasn't good enough for her mother's love, what was she worthy of? In The Monster That Ate My Mommy, Jessica Aiken-Hall takes the reader on her quest to find love and uncover the root of her suffering. In this courageous memoir, we learn the importance of love and belonging, and the price paid when it's out of reach. "This is one of the most moving and brave memoirs I have ever read--on par with The Liar's Club (Mary Karr) and The Glass Castle (Jeannette Walls). I was sucked in from the first sentence and remained riveted throughout. Aiken-Hall's raw exploration and recounting of highly traumatic life events is tempered with the gentleness of hope and the strength of perseverance. This is a book of extreme importance in the canon of women's memoir. Read it for the compelling story of survival: savor it for its lessons of grace and resilience." --Sarah Felix Burns author of Jackfish, The Vanishing Village… (plus d'informations)
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Truly a tear-jerker, thank you for sharing you story. I don't think I've ugly cried for so long. Growing up with a mentally ill parent hits so close to home. Some of the memories are so hard to read but they are therapeutic. By sharing her story she may help others. I was on the edge of my seat reading this. It is a very good book. ( )
  Shelly.Kittell | Jul 16, 2021 |
I wasn’t sure what I was getting into when I began reading The Monster That Ate My Mommy, only that it was a memoir and most likely filled with possibly troubling events. Told from the point-of-view of the author in vivid first-person, this book delivered on more than I was expecting. People say healing comes when you share your stories of pain, memories no one wants to think about, and I believe the author was trying to do just that by sharing her story with us. As someone who struggles with their own inner darkness, I know there must be some freedom that comes with not only sharing a troubled life but embracing the past – acknowledging it happened – and moving on to live the life you know you deserve. We hear about things that happen to people as they grow up, things that mold them into the person they are or will become, but we never get that insight that comes from a truly candid telling. This book will tear at your heart at times, make you silently hope certain things won’t come to pass, but inevitably do. But at the same time, there’s a certain understanding and insight that comes with this comprehensive tale. ( )
  AVG9 | Jul 10, 2021 |
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Mothers are supposed to love their children unconditionally, but what if they can't? "Your own mother doesn't love you--what makes you think anyone else will?" These words haunted the author and affected every decision she made. If she wasn't good enough for her mother's love, what was she worthy of? In The Monster That Ate My Mommy, Jessica Aiken-Hall takes the reader on her quest to find love and uncover the root of her suffering. In this courageous memoir, we learn the importance of love and belonging, and the price paid when it's out of reach. "This is one of the most moving and brave memoirs I have ever read--on par with The Liar's Club (Mary Karr) and The Glass Castle (Jeannette Walls). I was sucked in from the first sentence and remained riveted throughout. Aiken-Hall's raw exploration and recounting of highly traumatic life events is tempered with the gentleness of hope and the strength of perseverance. This is a book of extreme importance in the canon of women's memoir. Read it for the compelling story of survival: savor it for its lessons of grace and resilience." --Sarah Felix Burns author of Jackfish, The Vanishing Village

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