The book is not for everyone, but I loved it. My sister found it too sad. She stopped halfway through it because it hit home too much. Despite my sister's lack of finishing the book, I thought that was the greatest credit to the book, letting my sister see how someone else was brought up to be screwed up for various reasons including JW's, drugs, sexual relations, marriage.
It was trying to be funny, and I can see that it wasn't hysterical in every paragraph no matter how hard Kyria tried.
But that was what made the book important to me. Here was an extremely sad story told in dry humor in an attempt to address the issues.
I don’t know how she can’t see herself as just the biggest whiny, spoiled, little brat imaginable.
I cannot speak for Kyria, but I imagine she sees herself for what she is. She's not asking people to see her as JUST a victim of her upbringing, but she wants to acknowledge her upbringing and it's effect on her path, and wants others to benefit in anyway they can. If she is a whiny, spoiled brat, perhaps a reader would see how they don't want to raise their daughter in the same way.
It took 50 pages for me to say “I’m pretty sure I hate this person.”
Kyria probably hates the person she was. That's okay to hate her.
However, at every instance the only thing I could bring myself to is: you brought this upon yourself.
Consider for a moment- a girl in gifted class whose parents don't encourage them to advance toward being a scientist or a doctor or an athlete or something besides a wife of a JW. Even without the JW factor, we are learning from this book that a mind is a terrible thing to waste. Consider raising children to avoid the opposite sex, dating, premarital relations of any kind. This is what I noticed from the book- not assigning blame, but telling a true story and letting the reader pick out the obstacles in that life and reflect on their own obstacles.
On the negative side, I do think that trying to put Vaudeville-type humor in every paragraph was a bit heavier than I cared for. To me, that just added to the sadness of the story. I liked it, but had to get used to the style of humor.