One and a half stars. It had a lot of potential, and from what I was able to glean in my drifting-in-and-out-of-consciousness and half-hearted skimming of this book, the premise is, indeed, interesting.
The author of this book has gained much notoriety for his theory and accompanying books on birth order and how that influences your personality. This book was just another way for him to peddle those theories. And, oh my goodness, how he LOVES to talk about himself. I'm actually a big fan of personal stories used to illustrate a point, but when the point is "Look how fun and crazy I am!" over and over again, I kind of just want to chuck this book at the author's over-inflated head.
So, it was really hard to stay focused while reading this book because the author just sort of wandered around, talking about birth order, more stories about himself, etc. and every once in awhile would throw in a bit about childhood memories, but it was never very clear or easy to follow.
For those of you considering reading this book, I will save you the trouble. So, the idea is that you remember what you do from your early childhood (up until age 8 or so) because it coincides with your personal world view. Thus, if I see the world as a place intent on shutting me out, requiring me to claw my way to the top, etc. my childhood memories will reflect themes of being literally shut out, or humiliations, or unfair situations, and the like. I guess this makes sense. I've yet to really delve into my own memories and psychoanalyze myself accordingly. I don't doubt there's something to the idea, but the presentation was seriously lacking.