5 Tear-jerking Stars**
Updated 7/21/20* A buddy read with Kaceey that brought me to tears. I loved sharing one of my favorite books with you Kaceey and hope you enjoyed it. This book speaks to me in more ways than one. This was the second time I read it and yes, I cried again.. and again. I love these characters to pieces.. What I said in the end of this review still holds true today. We all experience things in life that make us feel embarrassed or unhappy with ourselves and our body image. This book showcases exactly that. I am still impacted by the same issue I was a few years ago, it has gotten worse.. the difference is that I have accepted it and that has made all the difference. For those of you who are struggling with something, you are not alone. In the words of Fredrik Backman (from Us Against You).. (sorry KH): "Those are my Brothers and Sisters. They Stand Tall if I Stand Tall."
Now, on to my original review.
**
Kristan Higgins, you wrecked me. I admit that I didn’t think it could happen, but with “Good Luck With That” - you accomplished exactly that, and you outdid yourself too!
This novel centers around three characters, Emerson, Marley and Georgia, all of whom bared their souls and left me absolutely bereft. “Good Luck With That” deals with sensitive topics including body image, self-acceptance and self-esteem. It is something every woman has dealt with one way or another. At times this book is both so desperate and yet so brave.. it pulls your heart right out of your chest and leaves it gaping.
Emerson, Marley and Georgia met at camp as teenagers. Not just at any camp, but at fat camp. There, they formed an unbreakable bond. Through the years, they’ve kept in touch, all still struggling with the same issues. Marley and Georgia now live in the same town, in Cambry-on-Hudson, New York, with Emerson living a bit farther away. Little do Marley and Georgia know, Emerson has had an even harder time with her weight than they have. Unfortunately, they find out when it’s too late, when they get a call from the hospital Emerson has been admitted too, when she has moments left to live. Right before she passes, she hands Marley and Georgia the list. The list they made in camp: “Things to Do When Your Skinny” - along with a directive - to live life and to be happy. The list includes things like: eat dessert in public, have a guy buy you a drink, get a piggyback ride from a hottie and tuck your shirt in, to name a few. Marley and Georgia are terrified. Grab life by the horns? Be happy?! And yet, it was Emerson’s dying wish, and so they embark on quite the little experiment.
Marley is a very successful chef who has a meal delivery service and her clients love her. Though she has always been overweight, Marley is comfortable in her own skin and she always has been. Marley is fun, vivacious and voluptuous and yet, Camden, a firefighter, and a friend of her brother, Dante’s, the one man she wants to date, doesn’t quite see her that way. With the list in hand however, Marley becomes bolder and is convinced that she can make Camden want her just as much as she wants him.
Georgia, on the other hand has never felt like she measured up. Even though she is at her skinniest, Georgia will always see herself as the fat girl. She has never felt good enough for her mother, or anyone else, not even Rafe, her ex-husband whom she loved with all of her heart. A former lawyer, Georgia is now a nursery school teacher who loves her job, she sees the list as a way to conquer her fears and find her sense of self.
Told from the perspectives of Emerson in the past, and Marley and Georgia in the present, “Good Luck With That” is a heartbreaking portrayal of what it is like to be in a place where you are unhappy with yourself and your life, and where, you are desperately yearning for something better. Kristan Higgins’ you brought tears to my eyes more than once and yes, they did indeed runneth over. Emerson, Georgia and Marley’s struggles were so very real, I felt as if I knew each of them, as if I were having dinner with them, chatting, laughing and crying over life’s trials and tribulations and spilt milk. This is now the third novel I have read by Ms. Higgins and this has far surpassed anything she has written before.
I think most, if not all women have experienced times in life where they were unhappy with themselves or where, there was something about their physical appearance that they were ashamed or embarrassed of. I can attest to that. For me, I am going through something now: something where, there are times that I look in the mirror and cry, though it is not here or there. What I have learned is to be thankful. Thankful for what I have, right here and right now.
A huge thank you to Edelweiss, Penguin Publishing Group and Kristan Higgins for a complimentary copy of this novel in exchange for an honest review.
Published on Edelweiss, Goodreads and Twitter on 9.2.18.