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3.19 of 5 stars
Susanna Kaysen, who wrote about her teenage depression in the bestseller Girl, Interrupted, now takes on another taboo: her vagina–whi... read full description

reviews

Apr 10, 2007
CJ rated it: 1 of 5 stars
This book is entirely about Susanna Kaysen's vagina. Seriously. If you're interested, then this is probably a good book for you. I was personally not a fan. (And no, there were no pictures. At least not in the edition I read, anyway.)
0 comments like (5 people liked it)
Dec 16, 2009
Heidi rated it: 3 of 5 stars
not about a camera...
0 comments like (7 people liked it)
Apr 07, 2008
Julie rated it: 1 of 5 stars
I am trying to remember who suggested I read this book. I want to kick them in their vagina.

I can handle a short book entirely devoted to a woman's vulva. I am completely comfortable with my own and others', and I constantly use words like cunt, pussy, and vulva in a non-derogatory context. I thought I could handle Susanna Kaysen's vag all up in my face for 150 or so pages. WRONG. The only reason I finished it was because it was such a quick, short read and I feel I have more of a ri More...
0 comments like (6 people liked it)
Sep 30, 2008
george rated it: 2 of 5 stars
The book is about Kaysen's vagina. Seriously, that's it--her vagina. It hurts. And hurts. And hurts some more. No one knows what's wrong. She tries wacky things like sitting in tea and she tries antidepressants (and a million other things). Nothing really works. The whole book is her complaining about her vagina. It was not interesting to me. It reminded me of the worst (in my opinion) monologue in the Vagina Monolgues--the my vagina is me one. I am more than my vagina; Kaysen is apparently not. More...
4 comments like (3 people liked it)
Sep 21, 2007
Katie rated it: 4 of 5 stars
This book is about Susanna Kaysen's vagina. It is where I learned about the "your bladder is healthy if you can pee for at least 7 seconds at a time" guideline that literally changed my life. High five healthy nether regions!
0 comments like (4 people liked it)
Feb 26, 2008
Kelly rated it: 5 of 5 stars
Anyone who has had to deal with this painful issue, as I have.. will appreciate what we go though to get a proper diagnoses and treatment and it is nice to know you are not alone
0 comments like (3 people liked it)
Nov 27, 2008
Olivia rated it: 5 of 5 stars
Anyone going into this book expecting it to be simply about a camera is either not very bright, or hasn't done their research. This book, indeed, is not about a camera, at least not in a literal sense.

The explanation of the title comes from an interview with Kaysen:

"It's a line from a Buñuel movie, Viridiana. The movie's about a bunch of hobos and peasant who take over a country mansion that belongs to a rich woman who's been trying to help them. There's a scene in w More...
0 comments like (5 people liked it)
Jan 15, 2012
Lindsay C rated it: 4 of 5 stars
A fast and satisfying read. Having just come off Wuthering Heights, I was ready for something contemporary and minimal...a "make you think but not too hard" kind of book. This did the trick. Devoting just under 150 pages almost solely to her vagina, (Yes! the vagina! It's ok to talk about it!) Susanna Kaysen hooked me into the frustration and pain of her condition. Women don't pay much attention to their vaginas when they are not "in use"... those of us with good gynaecologic More...
Jun 04, 2010
Jill rated it: 3 of 5 stars
Kaysen tells her story of dealing with pain in an "intimate place" in such a way that you feel like you are sitting with a close friend in a coffee shop somewhere, catching up. She begins with humorous anecdotes, relaying stories in a "she said this and then I said that and then.." way, with breathless enthusiasm. Quotes are presented without quotation marks, because as anyone who has told a story knows, it's never a word-for-word recitation, but rather your own personal in More...
Apr 12, 2010
Eric rated it: 4 of 5 stars
I think we've all had some pain or condition that no doctors have been able to treat and/or diagnose. We've just had to deal with it until it slowly went away. In Susanna Kaysen's case, it happens to be her "down there" region. She's frustrated that she has an inexplicable condition and even more frustrated that her doctors aren't able to do anything for her. On top of all the pain and worrying, she has to deal with a self-centered boyfriend that is insensitive to her pain and can only More...
0 comments like (1 person liked it)
Oct 09, 2009
Jackie rated it: 3 of 5 stars
I don't know if I can say anything that Amber hasn't. A bizarrely tragic and almost macabre story, in a way. At first, I thought that this was just going to be a funny shocking light piece of chick lit. I was wrong. We get a view into a woman's relationship with her vagina, but on the periphery, with her boyfriend and friends.

I'm not sure if it was the author's intention, but the main character is intensely immature. I was convinced at the book's beginning she was in her twenties, b More...
Mar 19, 2011
Paul rated it: 5 of 5 stars
In somewhat of a mystery/autobiography, a women relates her experiences with her vagina problems and the many byzantine ways it impacts her life. Talks about how illness can effect who we think we are, our relationships, emotions, and our quality of life. Despite the U.S.'s high level of medical technology, the author's experiences show how elusive finding solutions can be.
0 comments like (1 person liked it)
Sep 11, 2009
Amber rated it: 3 of 5 stars
I have no idea how this book ended up on my shelf except for the fact that it has a clearance sticker on it and I sometimes randomly purchase discounted books in the hopes I will make myself read more. So I'm guessing years passed and I had no idea that a book about a woman and her vagina was in my reading destiny. The first page is so direct with disgusting (yet certainly true) descriptions that I was instantly captivated to keep reading. Despite my desire to let this book go without finishi More...
Feb 03, 2011
Kristin rated it: 1 of 5 stars
Thank goodness this was a freebie from my gym's book exchange. I picked it up thinking the author would chronicle her quest to detemine the cause of intense pain in her female organs culminating in the dicovery that it was some rare genetic condition inherited from her mom. Guess the title is deceiving. The book's description also said it was at times funny. They must have left the funny out of my copy.
Instead, she spends 160 pages whining about why she doesn't like any of the treatments s More...
Feb 16, 2008
Erica rated it: 4 of 5 stars
For anyone who's ever had an undiagnosable problem that baffles medical authorities and only seems to worsen with treatment. I haven't actually experienced that, but if I did I would probably like this book even more.
0 comments like (1 person liked it)
Dec 17, 2009
Tia rated it: 3 of 5 stars
First the title gives you no clue what the book is about. It was an interesting look at a woman's relationship with her body, her sexual self, her vagina.
0 comments like (1 person liked it)
Mar 18, 2008
Shaina rated it: 1 of 5 stars
More than I ever needed to know about one middle-aged woman's vagina problems. 'Nuff said.
0 comments like (1 person liked it)
Sep 13, 2009
Chip rated it: 2 of 5 stars
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here
Jul 08, 2009
Victoria rated it: 4 of 5 stars
Susanna Kaysen is the kind of author that I can't help thinking I would like if I were ever to meet her in person. I admire her honesty, her dry and often ironic sense of humor, and the concise way she makes a few words say more than most authors could manage in a book three times the length.

This memoir is sharp, witty, purposeful, full of personality, and short enough that I didn't get tired of it... despite what other goodreads reviews of it say. I can only imagine that it's been a More...
0 comments like (1 person liked it)
Jun 08, 2009
Scott rated it: 3 of 5 stars
Can someone tell me what "The Camera My Mother Gave Me" means? Is this a part of the secret language that women use (don't deny it...I know you do!)?

Graphic, and rather painful story about Kaysen's Vagina (didn't mean to capitalize it, but by the time you're through with this story, you may too). I've never heard of it before, but I pray this is not a common ailment for women. The one question I took from this is why would her boyfriend be so insistent on getting in there onc More...
Aug 13, 2011
Gail rated it: 3 of 5 stars
I found this book a stark and sometimes humorous look at an agonizing chronic pain condition (with which I am all too familiar!). In case anyone's curious as to the title of the book, read Mo B.'s review below.

Ms. Kaysen is referring to vulvodynia: A difficult, sometimes excruciating and devastating condition affecting a woman's vulva, not vagina, specifically. It's just easier to say "vagina" because most of us are not yet comfortable with "vulva." And it d More...
Apr 27, 2010
Lizzie rated it: 1 of 5 stars
All about Susanna Kaysen's vagina. It hurt, she saw a lot of doctors and other experts, nothing helped, her identity was threatened because for her sex is life, her boyfriend kept nagging for sex, they broke up and she missed him, she fell in love with somebody else who didn't love her, she can't get over how her vagina could be mistaken about somebody. That's about it.

As someone with my own cunt issues I was expecting to like this but it was a meaningless bore.
1 comment like (1 person liked it)
Jan 04, 2012
Courtney rated it: 4 of 5 stars
Really a strange topic for a memoir. The author has terrible vaginal discomfort that no one can explain. For some reason, the book is really interesting. I didn't realize she also wrote Girl, Interrupted - must be that she is just a very talented author. I hope she finally got some help with her health issue. And I hope she never puts up with another terrible boyfriend again like the one in the book.
Jun 24, 2010
Carla rated it: 1 of 5 stars
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here
0 comments like (1 person liked it)
Mar 01, 2009
Lois rated it: 4 of 5 stars
This book has NOTHING to do with a camera- yet I found it funny at points as this woman goes through doctors trying to determine what is causing her pain in the most intimate of places. Some vulgarity, and much bluntness. But it made me laugh when I least suspected it as I could imagine some of this really happening to a person.
Sep 22, 2009
Jeremy rated it: 4 of 5 stars
Did not expect to like this book. It is about her vagina having massive pain and modern medicine's inability to work for her. I know vicariously now what it must be like to have the other sex's problems. It is also funny and candid as it was written by Susanna Kaysen of "Girl, Interrupted" noteriety.
May 11, 2010
Rachel rated it: 3 of 5 stars
I was kind of disappointed with this book. While it was funny, and very interesting, I found little to no soul in it and the author's narration. The content was definitely interesting, but I feel like this book could have gone much further. I felt it was too short, and too disconnected. Oh well.
Apr 10, 2009
Tricia rated it: 3 of 5 stars
Um, Wow. I listened to this book while traveling and, Wow. TOTALLY not what I expected. But good. This is a good story with the theme "To thine own self be true". Not that there's any Shakespeare in it....The title does not match the book at all, but makes sense in a roundabout way.
Nov 29, 2010
Adeline rated it: 4 of 5 stars
Likely interesting for most women to read. How often is there a whole book dedicated to a woman's relationship to her vag? And how all the doctors, especially the males, cannot understand it. Even tho it is a short one- I read it in one day. Both funny and tragic.
Sep 15, 2011
Tatiana rated it: 4 of 5 stars
I want to know what is wrong with her vagina too! I wish that this story continued on until there was a happy ending, but this is real life. At least towards the end she had learned a lot about her self and about the people that she wanted to keep around her.