Book Review: The Home For Broken Hearts by Rowan Coleman

Title: The Home For Broken Hearts
Author: Rowan Coleman
Publisher: Gallery; Original edition
Publication Date: September 7, 2010
Paperback: 352 pages
ISBN: 978-1439156858
Genre: Fiction

From the Publisher:

THE DOOR IS OPEN . . .

For young widow Ellen Wood, her Victorian home is a refuge—a place to feel safe with her eleven-year-old son, Charlie. But when money grows so tight that Ellen could lose the house, her sister, Hannah, makes a radical suggestion . . . rent out some of the rooms. Soon Ellen has three lodgers: Sabine, a German coworker of Hannah’s, recently separated from her husband; Allegra, an eccentric but wise novelist; and Matt, an up-and-coming young journalist in search of his voice, who has just landed a plum job in London.

Ellen thinks three strangers are the last complication she needs, but they make her realize just how isolated she has become. Their presence exposes a secret she’s been keeping hidden, as well as a conflict with her sister that is both shocking and revealing. And while a love affair with a younger man seems like a fantasy powered by her imagination, Ellen can’t deny her deep connection to Matt, or the changes he inspires in her and her relationship with Charlie. Outside her home’s sheltering walls lies a world of opportunity as well as danger. Now that she’s had the courage to open the door, does Ellen dare step through?

Witty, moving, and deeply insightful, The Home for Broken Hearts celebrates everything that makes life worth living, from an author who knows just how to speak to the heart.

My Review:

Beautiful, heart-warming, and redemptive, The Home For Broken Hearts by Rowan Coleman is a beautiful portrayal of some of the most life-changing situations one can envision and the healing that comes with time.  Eleven months ago, Ellen’s life drastically changed when her husband was killed in a motor vehicle crash. Since Nick’s death, Ellen has only felt comfort inside their home working as a copyeditor for romance fiction novels and caring for her son Charlie.  Ellen thought life was going as good as could possibly be expected when she learns that Nick’s life insurance policy will not pay out and she is in dire need of cash.  Seeking out her sister’s counsel, Hannah convinces her to let out rooms in the house.  Little does Ellen know how important this one step will be for her and her tenants Sabine, Matt, Allegra as well as Hannah and Charlie.    Coleman’s novel is filled with intricate detail, wonderful and eclectic characters and some extremely sensitive issues worked beautifully and seamlessly into the story.  It is truly brilliant to watch how Ellen transforms throughout the novel, while there were some points I was not crazy about (I cannot reveal them here), I did like to see the growth and transformation in all of the characters, especially in Matt and Charlie.  All told, The Home For Broken Hearts makes for an excellent evening or weekend of reading and I would recommend it to anyone looking for a good book to curl up with.

About the Author:

Rowan Coleman worked in bookselling and publishing for seven years, during which time she won the Company magazine Young Writer of the Year award. She lives in England, where she is working on her next novel.

I received a complimentary copy of The Home For Broken Hearts by Rowan Coleman from Simon & Schuster to review. Receiving a complimentary copy in no way reflected my review of aforementioned novel.

Book Review: Ugly As Sin by Toni Raiten-D’Antonio


Title: Ugly as Sin: The Truth About How We Look and Finding Freedom From Self-Hatred
Author: Toni Raiten-D’Antonio
Publisher: HCI; 1 edition
Publication Date: September 1, 2010
Hardcover: 268 pages
ISBN: 978-0757314650
Genre: Non-Fiction, Self-Improvement

From the Publisher:

‘I’m Ugly. You’re Ugly. So What?’

In Ugly as Sin Toni Raiten-D’Antonio, MSW, breaks the ultimate social taboo by insisting that she is ugly in the eyes of the world. More shocking still, she calls on the rest of us to own our ugliness too. But don’t be insulted. There’s a liberating purpose to her message, one that could finally set you free from the obsessing, self-doubt, and self-criticism that all of us participate in when we think about how we look.

In this unprecedented examination of ugliness, its pervasiveness in our society, and the havoc it wreaks on our psyches, spirits, and bodies, Raiten-D’Antonio bravely confronts the problem of ugliness (including her own) and opens a dialogue that is provocative and inspiring. She reveals the roots of our perceptions of ugliness and beauty, tracing them through biology, art, religion, and culture and shows how we have been led to fear being defined as ugly (‘ugliphobia’), and how this dread has become a universal problem. Comparing ourselves to impossible and ever-changing ideals of beauty, we endlessly cycle between efforts at self improvement and hopelessness.

What you will learn from Ugly as Sin is that overcoming ugliphobia begins with understanding the origins of the problem and learning that what we call ugly is not frightening or alien but part of being human. With searing honesty and empathy, Raiten-D’Antonio gives us the courage to redefine ugliness according to our own standards, while providing tools for finding self-acceptance and living in a world in which ugliness seems to be the ultimate sin.

My Review:

If anyone has ever thought “if only I was taller, shorter, thinner, bustier, curvier, less curvy, had a different nose, hair, smile”, and yes, the list could go on endlessly, then Ugly As Sin by Toni Raiten-D’Antonio is a book for you.  D’Antonio takes a deep look at the terms ugly and beautiful, and how these terms have evolved throughout time and how women’s perceptions and self-esteems have changed with these perceptions.   D’Antonio begins the book by informing the reader that everyone is ugly in the hopes of shattering the myth of pretty verses not pretty to help liberate women who torture themselves because they do not look like one person or another, and that we are all ugly insofar as we cannot possibly live up to the ideal set up by today’s media.  D’Antonio shares her earliest memories and awareness of beauty and how it affected her thoughts throughout her childhood.  She proceeds to write three subsections: Origins; Ugliness and Culture; The Ugly Effects; Overcoming Ugliphobia and sums up with how we can help spread the word and help our children to grow up strong and confident.   D’Antonio follows up her book with a detailed appendix showcasing how women of all ages have felt about themselves, a wonderful list of sources, and a detailed index.  Ugly As Sin is a book to empower women and help women of all ages to realize that their potential does not lie in their appearance or body size.    I would, without a doubt, recommend Ugly As Sin to every girl, teen, and woman.

About the Author:

Toni Raiten-D’Antonio, LCSW, is a well-known psychotherapist with a thriving private practice in Suffolk County, Long Island. She is a professor of psychology and social work at Empire State College. Prior to becoming a therapist she worked in television and theater as both a performer and producer. She has two daughters and lives in New York with her husband, the Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Michael D’Antonio.

Visit Toni Raiten-D’Antonio’s website.

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I received a complimentary copy of Ugly As Sin by Toni Raiten-D’Antonio from TLC Book Tours to be a part of this tour and offer my honest review of the book. Receiving a complimentary copy in no way reflected my review of aforementioned book.