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Beautiful Stranger by Hope Donahue
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Beautiful Stranger

by Hope Donahue

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This is a memoir by a woman who by all accounts, had everything. She came from a wealthy family, never needed anything, although her parents were definitely far from normal and her mom could have benefited from therapy. The author fell into the world of plastic surgery and became addicted, partially because of her self-loathing and her quest for perfection and partially because of the "plastic surgeon" she chose who actually was not board certified. This book is interesting and I would classify it as a "summer read". The moral of the story is to love who you are because everyone is different and there is no such thing as the perfect body or the perfect face. I enjoyed this book, I tend to like memoirs like this. It is not a heavy read and I would think only women would enjoy the topic. ( )
Angelic55blonde | Jun 14, 2009 |  
Beautifully written. There were times that I found this book hitting so close to home that I wanted to weep. I have never been under the knife by choice in my life, however, any woman can relate to the insecurity that is a driving force behind Hope's surgeries. Disturbing and heartbreaking, an altogether great read.

This is the story of Hope Donahue, a debutante who grew up with old money and gorgeous looks. However, she can't seem to see anything beautiful about herself and continually changes her look through plastic surgery while feeling emptier after each procedure. ( )
bookwormteri | Oct 11, 2007 | 1 vote
A story about the author's obsession with her physical self, this book revealed a narcissistic - and ultimately unattractive - core. I am sure she's a nice person, but I wouldn't necessarily want to invite her over for coffee after reading this book; I suspect she's be tedious. ( )
Meggo | Mar 11, 2006 | 1 vote
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 159240152X, Paperback)

Hope Donahue seemed to have it all: beauty, wealth, social status. She was an only child who grew up with the best private schools, debutante balls, and a home in Hancock Park, Los Angeles’s old-money enclave. But beneath the family’s façade of “keeping up appearances,” Hope hid a host of ugly truths, including a mother increasingly jealous of her daughter’s good looks, an uncle’s sexual advances, and a father who cowed to the demands of his wife and coolly reserved parents. Hope became addicted to a quest for physical perfection in place of her self-esteem—and by the age of twenty-seven she had undergone seven plastic surgeries. In riveting, unflinching prose, Hope recounts her downward spiral that alienated her family and friends, and led her to theft, bankruptcy, and a sadistic relationship before she began her recovery.

A powerful response to a culture obsessed with extreme makeovers and risky procedures that promise flawlessness, Beautiful Stranger is a timely, cautionary tale. Her story will inspire the countless women and men like her who struggle every day in a culture that feeds us dangerous images of unattainable perfection.

Beautiful Stranger is a dark, scary, and important story of how broad social trends shape the suffering of individuals—how, in the author’s case, the beauty addiction of a whole culture is mapped onto a dysfunctional family and an obsessive compulsive disorder. Donahue perfectly captures the predatory style of a certain kind of surgeon—at once seductively flattering and solicitous and yet always on the prowl for access into the faces and bodiess of the vulnerable.” —Virginia L. Blum author of Flesh Wounds

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:08 -0400)

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