Disclaimer: I'm friends with the author. However, my friendship with her doesn't affect this review whatsoever because if she read it and knew I was BS'ing, she'd be even more pissed off. So obviously, I'm not sugarcoating anything, which actually makes perfect sense for this book.
I've noticed a slight trend in my reading this year. Call it reactionary, call it retaliatory, call it self-discovery--whatever. Or maybe it's just that I'm tired and angry on a lot of different levels and I'm drawn to these stories about gloriously messy and extra characters who either don't hide themselves or learn that hiding their true selves is far more trouble than it's worth.
i wish i was worse follows this trend with one notable distinction: it's not fiction. now, if you know me, you know I don't read much nonfiction. This largely has to do with the general state of the world and the fact that I actually read trial transcripts/cases/statutes for my job and all that leaves me without the desire or mental energy to read nonfiction. But every once in awhile, I make exceptions and because I do so infrequently, those exceptions had better be worth it.
i wish i was worse is worth it.
More a collection of essays and reflections than a memoir, i wish i was worse is told through Delalat's raw and unflinching examination of her past experiences: disappointments, mistakes, and the lessons learned therefrom. There's also grief that's borne of different losses. All of these experiences have not shaped Delalat so much as forged her into a woman who is unrepentant about who she is, what she expects, and what she wants.
The message of the book is set out early: "Don't mistake this for another guide to becoming better. This isn't advice. It's a dare. A dare to become worse: louder, messier, feral, diabolical." This is not because you hate yourself or you hate others--it's a dare not to care about what other people think. It's a book about loving yourself enough to be authentically yourself, no matter what, and trusting that you'll find the people who will love you not in spite of it, but because of it.
Delalat's voice is undeniable, with sarcasm, wit, humor, self-deprecation, and just enough tenderness to keep things real. Along with the rage and being fed-up with expectations of women, there's also some genuine laugh-out-loud moments. And there's love--lots of love. It's in every page, every word, and it's what drives her to be the best worst version of herself. Even throughout conflicts and heartbreaks and loss, Delalat stays stubbornly, defiantly true to herself and refuses to be better at making herself small for other people's comfort. She is worse in the absolute best sense of the word.
Thank you to Shirin Delalat and NetGalley for the eARC!