One-Line Summary: Holy Hell. That was a serious rollercoaster
ride through the mind of me…only written by someone else.
I’m not going lie and say the book sounded amazing and I had
to read it based on the description because that would be a partial lie. While
the description was intriguing, it was the cover that sucked me in. Look at the
gloriousness of the raccoon (his name is Rory, by the way). He looks, as the
title states, furiously happy. I had to read it.
If you don’t know who Jenny Lawson is, you aren’t alone. I
had no clue that she had even written another book before this one titled Let’s
Pretend This Never Happened, which I am now reading and digging. Let me see if
I can sum up Ms. Lawson: quirky, hilarious, slightly-to-moderately crazy (she
calls herself crazy often) genius, and master of sharing too much embarrassing
information about herself. In short, I’m smitten.
In Furiously Happy, I found myself feeling a range of
emotions and nodding my head along wondering why no one talks about the
important things, like how airports transform people into assholes, or why we
don’t talk about the widespread epidemic of chlamydia in koalas, or what
happens to all that skin that microdermabrasion places scrape off women’s faces,
or why kangaroos actually have three vaginas. I often found myself wondering
why I had never thought of such outlandish things when I’m suffering from my
sporadic bouts of insomnia, and believe me, my mind goes to some weird places. Lawson isn’t afraid to face these topics
head-on, and I love her for it.
Lawson is a riot to read. Her chapters are short and sweet,
and fly by incredibly quickly. Her prose is snappy and lightning-quick and, if
you blink, you are sure to miss the humor and sarcasm. The stories of Lawson’s
marriage are probably my favorite. They are packed with love and a little
outrage, too, but mostly love. Her stories of therapy are fascinating, a little
humorous and sometimes cringe-worthy. This is a book celebrating and explaining
her various mental illnesses, after all. As someone who has battled both
depression and anxiety, I just want to say that she nails the descriptions of
each in a way that “normals” will be able to better understand. She sheds light
on the taboo of talking about mental illness and makes people feel less alone
in their neuroticisms which, in my small opinion, are the biggest reasons to
recommend this book to all my library friends and readers.

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