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About the Author

Image credit: Crystal Renn

Works by Crystal Renn

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Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1986-06-18
Gender
female
Occupations
model
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

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Reviews

11 reviews
I was super excited to read this, then I actually started it and I was kind of let down. I thought the voice, and the story, at the beginning were kind of... hm. Not what I was hoping for? I guess that's the best way to put it. But after I got into the second chapter something shifted and I really got into her story.

This is a wonderful book. It's a fascinating glimpse into the world of modeling for those of us who only see the end product, it has humor and witty asides all over the place, show more and there's tons of great statistics that are presented without making the text all boring and dry. This is what I'll be recommending to teen girls who are interested in modeling instead of that book [b:America's Next Top Model Fierce Guide to Life|5016449|America's Next Top Model Fierce Guide to Life The Ultimate Source of Beauty, Fashion, and Model Behavior|J.E. Bright|http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51Q6Tz00s5L._SL75_.jpg|5083030]. It doesn't vilify the fashion industry or modeling in general, but it does address the problems that crop up when your working world revolves around your appearance.

Plus there are some great pictures included. I only wish they could have put in shots from every shoot she describes. Some of the outfits sounded pretty awesome.
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When Crystal was 14-years old, a modelling scout saw her and told her she needed to lose a lot of weight (she was 5’9’’ and 165 lbs), but if she did, she could make it in the modelling world. Crystal decided this was what she wanted to do, and went down to 95 lbs before heading to New York City to seek out that scout and the Agency he was a part of. She suffered for three years with anorexia before she pulled herself together, only to become bigger, still (no pun intended!), in the show more plus-size modelling world (at a size 12 once her weight settled).

I thought this was really interesting. Horrifying how skinny she became. She did share photos in the book, as well. After her bout with anorexia, she seemed so much more positive about her body-image as a plus model. I did look her up online after, though, to see that she’s gone down a couple of sizes since. What an awful world that is, though – the fashion industry.
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I knew next to nothing about Crystal Renn before reading this book, aside from her being a total babe. This was an interesting read, which certainly inspired me to be a little more interested by the fashion industry as a whole, and not just in its unjust treatment of not-stick-thin women. Crystal comes off as a likable, vivacious person, and the book often feels as though she's telling you her story in person, as a friend. Admittedly, I haven't read too many memoirs, so that may just be par show more for the course.

I do know that I enjoyed this book, and I found Renn's recovery from anorexia to be very inspiring as well as very lucky. If only every person afflicted by an eating disorder could have the same sort of epiphany as Crystal Renn.
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½
I didn't particularly care for this memoir. It was written dully and since I had heard so much about Crystal Renn's story through magazine interviews that I didn't learn anything new. However, it you're new to how fat is demonized in this country even when studies prove it isn't as bad as the "Media" makes it out to be, you'll gleam a lot of info from this book. I'd gift this book to any teenage or preteen girl who feels like she has an imperfect body. Crystal Renn writes directly to that show more audience. show less

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Statistics

Works
1
Members
211
Popularity
#105,255
Rating
½ 3.3
Reviews
10
ISBNs
7
Languages
3

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