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Cupcake Brown

Author of A Piece of Cake: A Memoir

1 Work 1,234 Members 43 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Cupcake Brown Credit: Misti Layne

Works by Cupcake Brown

A Piece of Cake: A Memoir (2006) 1,234 copies, 43 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1965
Gender
female
Nationality
USA
Map Location
USA

Members

Reviews

44 reviews
First of all, this book is an undeniably gripping and gritty read. It brought tears to my eyes several times, and I'm always in awe of books that can do that.

If ever a book demonstrates the perils facing the underclass, this book does . . .starting with the risk of single parenthood, the ridiculous family court decisions, the abuses in the foster care system, followed by the dangers faced by runaways. Prostitution, gangs, drugs, spousal abuse, homelessness. The author's life careens out of show more control after the horrific trauma of her childhood.

I felt like the best parts of the book were really how Cupcake shows the reader how drug addicts think, act, and feel . . .but incredibly, it seemed like an awful lot of work (and a surprising amount of initiative) to be one.

The ending is very uplifting in good measure because of the people who were able to see beyond the drugs to the human being. Honestly, there must have been something special about Cupcake that wasn't quite conveyed because people helped her repeatedly, sometimes when it was hard to see why she deserved it (from the reader perspective) given how much she lied.

The writing is not particularly literary, but I think if it was, it really wouldn't read as true. It's an incredible story, and honestly, it doesn't need a lot of embellishment in the language department.
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I had no expectations when I picked this book up for $1 at my local Goodwill, other than the premise sounded interesting. I’ll be honest, the image and the name intrigued me, because I do actually judge a book by its cover. Especially at thrift stores. But what a genuinely great read this turned out to be.

This book starts out through the gate at a full sprint, and it takes a while for it to come down. It’s a memoir of Brown’s life, from the beginning of her journey at 11 when she show more stumbled upon her mother’s prone body, to her current success as a highly respected lawyer and motivational speaker. Actually, it doesn’t talk largely about who she is now, but how she got to that point in her life. She goes through A HELLUVA LOT. And for a huge majority of the book, it’s incredibly dark. As I was getting to the halfway through point, I had to ask myself when it would get better for her. But it did, of course. This book is highly inspirational, very humbling, and exceptionally moving. It talks about quite a few things that people don’t like to think about, and it is very no holds barred about the situations she gets in and the adversity she faces.

But to me, it really opened my eyes to what some people have to go through and how seriously addiction can mess you up. Actually reading through someone’s first-hand experience of situations that include the following: blowing guys that picked her up as a hitchhiker, being raped, and joining a gang because of a lack of family figures… Well, it’s downright upsetting, and it should be, because these are real experiences that countless people go through every day. So expect every conceivable bad thing you can imagine happening to her, because it did. And she does not shy away from the details. You’ve been warned. Frankly, it just compounds the fact that I live such a charmed life.

An interesting theme that is used throughout the book is the idea that you aren’t that messed up if you have a job. You don’t need help; you’re not even an actual junkie. And this is a belief that not only Brown had, but her drug-addled companions. To them, simply working through the cravings, and often high, still meant that they weren’t “that bad.” This book has several themes throughout: rags to riches, religious redemption, and it’s a highly moralistic, empowering tale. Brown is clearly trying to prove a point with it, but I don’t think that’s such a bad thing. My one actual criticism would be that it is entirely too preachy at the end. According to Brown and her sponsor, you basically can’t find redemption from drugs and addiction unless you believe in God or a higher power. You, as a person, are basically incapable of getting your head above water without divine intervention. That’s cute and all, but I tend to have more of a belief in humanity itself than a higher power.

I think this book is definitely worth a read for anyone seeking motivations to seek help from their drug addiction, and definitely for anyone who has always wondered what it's like to experience it all, and somehow come out on top.
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This book is an ugly memoir. I say ugly because what this woman goes through is heartbreaking, shocking and disgusting.

The story reaches far beyond drug and alcohol abuse. Family problems, job failure, school dropouts, impotent foster care systems, abortions, prostitution, gangbanging, rape, stealing, domestic violence ... it’s all in there.

“Friends are like buses,” I uncaringly replied as I took a hit off the joint, “If you miss one, sooner or later, another will come. The names of show more the routes change, but the show less
A Piece of Cake blew me away! I don’t remember reading a memoir that I actually wanted to read. Cup’ has lived through hell, a hell in which we can only imagine. Cup’s story started out of her at the age of 11; an insecure young girl who just wanted to be something and look pretty. Instead, she found her mother dead. Everything fell apart. Her hitchhiking and running away introduced her to drugs and alcohol, gangs, and theft. Experiencing every drug under the sun along with drinking, show more only made those ‘bad’ memories disappear, which was exactly what Cupcake wanted. Her move from job to job convinced her she was not an addict because “addicts don’t have jobs”. Before she knew it, she was hitting rock bottom, and hard.
It is up to her on whether she should listen to the voice she has been ignoring all along and make things right, or keep doing what keeps her from her own reality.
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Statistics

Works
1
Members
1,234
Popularity
#20,805
Rating
4.0
Reviews
43
ISBNs
12
Favorited
2

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