Ratings1
Average rating4
Cheryl Peck has many stories to tell-of her naughty cat, her quirky family, and her experiences as a large gay woman in the American heartland. Now in a potpourri of real tales by turns poignant and laugh-out-loud funny, Cheryl talks about family and growing up, love and loss. With self-deprecating humor and compassionate insight, she remembers the time she hit her baby sister in the head with a rock, how her father taught her to swim by throwing her into deep water, and the day when-while weighing in at 300 pounds-she became an inspirational goddess at her local gym. Filled with universal stories about a daughter's love for her parents and the eternal quest for finding meaning in it all, this book reveals many seemingly unremarkable moments that make a life-the weighty events that, like fat girls sitting on lawn chairs, just won't let go.
Reviews with the most likes.
Maybe I was expecting too much, but I
wasn't crazy about the book. An essay here and there was wonderful,
but there were too many that just seemed like the ramblings of that
talkative person seated next to you on the plane who won't let you
get back to your book. Perhaps she needed a better editor.
The essays I liked, however, I really liked. My favorite essay from
the book was questionably “The Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company”. In
this essay, Peck tells about her grandmother with such love that I
wish I'd known her. Well, I suppose in a way I have.