My only real criticism is I feel like she skipped over a lot and didn't provide enough specific stories or details over various parts of her life. I know a lot of people seemed disappointed it wasn't more about Y&R, but it's a memoir about her life, not just about her time on Y&R, so I felt like that aspect was balanced fairly well, just found it disappointing that she kind of skipped over most of her childhood and a lot of other parts of her life I'm sure I would have found interesting. I don't feel like I got to know her very well, it felt like it just touched on the surface of her life.
Now, this is not really a criticism as I'm sure it was out of honest belief as to what she was told growing up and ignorance of the truth, but she's not Cherokee despite her belief that both her mother and father were part Cherokee, as she spoke of in the book and also in interviews. I don't think she at all set out to deceive anyone, neither likely did her family that passed the story on to her, but as people in the Genealogy community know, it's an extremely common belief (usually a false one) among many Americans that they have Native ancestors and this false story gets passed down through generations. As soon as I read it, I couldn't help but wonder if this was the case or not, and so I did a little genealogical digging and her ancestors are definitely all white at least 4 generations back. I didn't bother spending any time trying to go further, so she could potentially have distant Cherokee ancestors, but even if so, in no way would they have faced the racism she thought they were running from when they moved to California, and based on an interview she did, she seemed to truly believe that at least one grandparent on either side of her family was full Cherokee and that was why they moved. It's interesting that this is such a common phenomena, even though it's often false. Also yikes to her son calling his production company "Team Cherokee" and using a feathered headdress as the logo (as I came across while researching this) even if the family were part Cherokee, considering they did not grow up in the culture I think that was a pretty gross move anyway.