Member Reviews
One of the most stunning books I have come across this entire year! You have to read it! It's so well written. it's astonishing and amazing and sad and everything at once. I've never known a book is so well written that you feel scared and happy and a though you're right there. Pick it up!
This book came highly recommended by a lot of people. I tried not to have expectations, but I had high ones. It didn't disappoint. With incredible writing, this memoir is heartbreaking and beautiful at the same time. Learning about Tara Westover's childhood and life and everything she's overcome and accomplished was incredible. Memoir's are pretty hard to review and comment on, as it's hard to judge and rate someone's life story, but this is an easy review as this memoir was so well written.
Powerful. This is one of those books that's really hard to write a review about, because it was all just so incredibly powerful. I was shocked at how Tara's parents act so many times - her father is reckless with life and her mother is complacent. The whole thing just awed me. I couldn't believe she overcame THAT crazy of a background to become who she is today. Blew my mind.
Tara was raised in Idaho by 'freedom fighters' who thought the Feds would pull kids away from God while they were in public school, so she never attended k-12. Her brother left home to attend college and convinced her to study for the ACT and attend college as well. Tara shares stories of her childhood - time spent in the junkyard, roaming the mountain, and making oils with her mom.
I really enjoyed the book. It's an easy read and I wanted to keep reading no matter what I was feeling. There are stories of physical and emotional abuse that made me angry, but I wanted to keep reading to find out how she handled it. There are stories of teaching herself algebra and trigonometry and how determined she was to pass the ACT. Some of my favorite stories, that gave me ridiculous amounts of anxiety, were how unsafe they were - from leaving vacation late at night with a 12 hour car ride ahead of them, to basically using forklifts as elevators. The dad took a lot of unnecessary safety shortcuts to save on time so they could earn more money and almost all of them ended in injury.
I grew up with a mother in the medical field so reading about their cures, especially when Tara is grown and living at college, also gave me anxiety. Tara explains how she doesn't want to go to the doctor because she's been conditioned throughout her entire life that they are bad and will poison you, but that any of the tinctures her mother gave her for pain never worked.
This book is very eye opening and it will stay with you for quite some time after reading it. It's hard to believe these kinds of things are still happening in this country and it definitely make you really get to know people and not judge them because you really don't know what people have gone through or going through. Tara shows a lot of perseverance and bravery. She has come a long way and she grew into a very strong and undefended woman despite her childhood. It just goes to show it doesn't matter where you come from, you can lean, grow and make the future better. I highly recommend this book and I suggest not reading the synopsis before reading this book.
Thanks to neutrally for the advanced copy of this book and the opportunity to provide my honest review.
Having read „Educated“ I am no longer surprised how a book about a young lady in the US getting an education could become such a bestseller.
Tara Westovers life story is enthralling, educative and shocking. Especially as a non-US reader there were incidences I would have dismissed as exaggerated and baldy fabricated in a fiction novel. Knowing the book is a memoir makes it even more touching and important.
Highly recommend.
This memoir was an easy read, interesting & informative story. Kept my interest throughout. Shows family dynamics in current times
This story, this harrowing yet powerful story, only supports how I feel about the necessity for accessible formal education, as well as the importance to have a desire to educate oneself. Tara's experiences only prove the immense power of education - how education allows us to be able to consciously examine the world and judge/act accordingly, how striving to learn opens doors to possibilities we can scarcely imagine, and how educating ourselves ultimately gives us the strength of having our own voice.
And so, I have no reservations in saying that I am of the strong opinion that this raw and contemplative story is one every person should read.
**Note: I have been told that I can be a negative Nancy from time to time. Whilst reading this, there were several aspects of Tara's story that didn't quite add up to me. I believe every reader should have a healthy ounce of skepticism within them, and mine was causing little red flags to pop up here and there. I appreciate the author's candidness about the unreliability of childhood memories and although I took the extreme nature of the book's content with a grain of salt, it did not detract from the overall message of this book - the importance of education - and so I rated based on that.
This book will stay with me for a long time. It tells the story of Tara who grew up in a devout Mormon family in Idaho where she didn’t attend school, and what happens over the years to lead to her earning her doctorate from Cambridge. At times the book is very distressing, even more so when you remember this isn’t fiction, this was Tara’s actual life. A truly fascinating read and what a brave lady to tell her story.
Really liked this raw, honest account of growing up in a less than traditional home. I experienced emotions all over the spectrum while reading this title--anger, fear, sadness, empathy, happiness.... So many feelings--definitely contributes my final verdict on the work.
This one was super fascinating but not my favorite. I live in Idaho so it's always so interesting to me read about others experiences while living in Idaho & this one was no different!
It felt very slow in a lot of parts and also kinda preachy, but overall I really liked it!
Educated is the memoir of Tara Westover, a woman raised in rural Idaho whose family experienced many struggles with poverty, mental illness, and abuse. This is the story of a woman who overcame a cycle of abuse and fought for her right to an education. Educated is one of the most eye-opening things I’ve read and is truly unlike anything that I’ve read before. Often heartbreaking, this memoir is filled with vivid anecdotes, crisp writing, and will make you feel as if you’re standing next to Tara as she re-examines her childhood and educational journey. It’s important to know that this is a heavy book to read in many ways- the depictions of abuse (and failure of anyone to intervene) will be frustrating and disturbing to read about. But it is worth it. I highly recommend this memoir to everyone. It will make you think deeply about your own life, what education means, and will generate reflection and discussion. This won’t be a memoir that I forget.
Finding it hard to review this one given it's Tara's life experience, but did not enjoy this memoir as much as others ones I've read. An inspiring story for sure though.
This book was absolutely stunning in every way, it is both heartbreaking and inspirational and honestly, the perfect read.
Heartbreaking and inspiring all in one. I burned through this book and was so impressed by one woman's drive.
This memoir was incredible. I find it challenging to give reviews of autobiographies/memoirs as it is hard to judge the content of the book. This book reminded me a lot of The Glass Castle. I had to remind myself throughout reading it, that it was a true story, because there are so many unbelievable events in Westover's life.
Overall, this book is incredibly well-written and demonstrates the importance of education and resilience of the human spirit. I have recommended this book to many friends and I believe it is an important read.
Educated by Tara Westover is an almost overwhelming testament to the power of curiosity and education and self-determination and resiliency. It is at turns fully inspiring and numbingly disturbing, so much so that, at times, it reads more like fiction than a memoir.
Tara grew up in one of those families we usually read about after the FBI or CPS has invaded their militarized fortress and removed the children. Her father is a fanatic, a conspiracist, a damaged mind and a dictator, but he is also Tara's father, and - as impossible it is to imagine - it's clear she holds a deep sense of loyalty to this man,
The heart of the story, however, is about Tara's relentless quest to understand herself, her family dynamics, her past, her future, her place, and the world around here - a world which was a big scary boogyman to her as a result of her father's mental health. That she manages to almost singlehandedly lift herself from a child who never had any formal education to a college student and eventually a PhD is remarkable, and should encourage every reader to set unattainable goals and then achieve them.
Beyond the story itself, Educated is a beautifully written book. There is a poignancy to the author's retelling, to her ability to tease meaning and redemption and out of all life has handed her. Word choices, pacing, even plotting - that bane of memoirs - have been used to benefit a highly personal yet almost universal story of reinvention.
Educated is not a beach read. It pushed me away as often as it drew me in. It forced me to look away more than once, but it also made me look inside.
This review is based on an advance copy read.
A powerful memoir from a powerful woman. I felt extremely sad reading about her toxic family and how she still couldn't release herself from it after all the horrible things she went through. We take education from granted and from our sheltered lives, privileged individuals that we are, we often forget how so many people struggle to even get a chance to get an education and a better life for themselves. I know there's some controversy about some of the facts described in her books and don't want to get into that as I believe her family might be lying in order to `save face". The truth is usually somewhere in the middle.
Taras story is so inspiring so moving teaching us about the strength nit takes to overcome.your childhood.A book that I hear mentioned all the time on people’s top ten lists .A story that’s perfect for bookclub classroom discussion.#netgalley#educated
A memoir that show how determination and perseverance can overcome obstacles. Outstanding book written from the heart and overflowing with hope.
Excellent