Member Reviews

The book is written from the point of view of a young woman, Charlotte, who is suffering from an eating disorder. As an adult survivor of an ED myself, I was quite curious and intrigued by the premise and looked forward to diving in.
But alas, the work is faulty for a number of reasons. Firstly, it is in desperate need of a good editor. The writing is unfortunately sophomoric and uninspiring, repetitive and vague in places, while being too wordy in others. Charlotte needs a hobby; her navel-gazing is frustrating and mind-numbing. She is intentionally obtuse and self-centered, and while the descriptions of the OCD-type obsessions with (not) eating certain things is probably authentic, her interactions with family and friends simply reveal a troubled teen who seems to be uninterested in anything. I did not find the dialogue or activities in the triggering or engaging in any way. It was simply boring.
Charlotte as a person is static and unchanging, despite her own assessment that she tries to get better. If this book reflects an actual experience, she needs serious psycho-social help that she doesn’t seem to be getting, and it is not enlightening or interesting or reflective to read about this person. Disappointed and sad about this experience.

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The Definition of Beautiful will help women of all ages combat society's destructive beauty standards and accept themselves above and beyond the imposition of these standards.

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This is quite a debut for a teenage author. Part memoir, part dreamscape, Charlotte Bellows brings you into her mind as she struggles through an eating disorder during high school. This book has the potential to be triggering, as is typical for eating disorder memoirs, but is a worthwhile read nonetheless. I hope to see more from this author

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“Some people would burn a house to live in chaos.”

In “The Definition of Beautiful,” by Charlotte Bellows bravely shares her journey through the depths of an eating disorder that unfolds during the challenging period of the Covid lockdown. From the initial stages of seemingly harmless diets to the life-threatening clutches of the disorder, Charlotte lays bare the destructive obsession with her weight that jeopardized not only her physical well-being but also her relationship with family and friends.

I cannot express how amazing this book was. I’ve read a lot of eating disorder books in the past and this one was by far the best written and most impactful. Charlotte writes in a way so I could clearly see and feel everyone’s sides; Charlotte wants to attain an unattainable size and her family’s terror and inability to fix her if she didn’t want to be fixed. The book drew me in immediately and I couldn’t put it down and I cannot tell you how much I cried when reading it. Absolutely perfect 5 out of 5 stars.

-Mental Illness
-Eating Disorder
-Hospitals
-Toxic Friend
-Weight Hate Talk
-F/F

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I received this book for free. This does not impact my review in any shape or form.

The Definition of Beauty, by Charlotte Bellows, is a dark memoir about the struggles of fighting an eating disorder. Bellows illustrates how tempting it is to listen to an addiction whispering in your mind, rather than your loved ones, even though they’re the ones that planted the addiction in your mind. Bellows details her painful journey, from seemingly harmless conversations with her mother and father, to her painful friendships between herself, Anne, and Jade, and even the subtler hits, that caused Bellows’s disorder to develop as horrifically as it did. Despite this, Bellows also goes into detail tiny sparks of light that helped her find her way, and how she was able to piece together what others could not.

Eating disorders can be very seductive. Thoughts and emotions pin you into a corner psychologically, emotionally, and finally physically. I like how Bellows compares her disorder with an abusive partner. It’s all summed up in this sentiment, where she says that he’s all she had, despite him being the enemy. I loved how there were times Bellows’s point-of-view was intertwined with ED’s, and I felt all the frustration I felt as a reader for Bellows seemingly putting herself in that situation, even though ED also played a role in torturing her. Moreover, I liked how, towards the end of the book, we actually see what ED has become, just as Bellows starts to recover.

The book reminds me of yet another book called Reviving Ophelia: Reviving the Selves of Adolescent Girls. It discusses how family, school, and other environments that we may think are safe for adolescent girls are actually the most dangerous for their self-esteem. Bellows perfectly illustrates how, when it comes to eating disorders or any other addiction, there doesn’t have to be this all encompassing traumatic event where our loved ones are all either gone or we’ve alienated ourselves from them. We’re like contortionists in that manner; the world tells us what to do, and we try to twist our ways that are unnatural, if only to gain the approval of everyone else. Who cares if we’re dancing skeletons at the end of it? Anything, just to give everyone else what they want.

I absolutely enjoyed this book. I appreciated the candor Bellows was able to bring, as well as the almost hypnotizing tone she delivers to her audience. As such, I would like to give this book a 5 out of 5 stars, and would recommend it with other books such as the aforementioned Reviving Ophelia by Mary Pipher and Untangled by Lisa Damour.

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A beautifully written memoir detailing the author’s battle with an eating disorder. It was raw and honest and challenges many of the stigmas people believe about eating disorders. I truest hope the author writes more because they are so talented. Thank you to NetGalley, the author, and publisher for a chance to read and review this book.

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Please read the trigger warning to this book as it has plenty, but wow, what a work. I love how--perhaps because the author is still so young--there's genuineness to the way it's written & the way it tells stories. To get into her head and all of the things passing through, how she illustrates it through the companion of Ed & The Mysterious Girl, the dreamscapes of it, yet there was hope and warmth and rawness of adolescence's peak and harsh high school days...? This is among my best read for the year. I am of healthy & well condition but I am on the thin side & it's eye opening to know that everyone felt cold when they're.. thin. And some of the.. how it gets painful & frail it's feeling sometimes to have to sit for a long time. Her relationship with food. The way she saw Dr. Blunt & wanting to get better, even if she hated it at first, at least to dodge that; but then that becomes the beginning of her getting better? I love it. Thank you for sharing your voice, Charlotte.

Thank you to publisher & Net Galley for allowing me the eARC copy in exchange for this honest review.

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A really touching book that would make for a wonderful resource for teens, and for librarians/teachers. Definitely a powerful story

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Review in exchange for a NetGalley ARC

This story is a mixture of the author's eating disorder memoir and magical realism dream sequences. Reviewing her experience is not fair of a memoir, but I found her story realistic with a easy to follow plot. The characters were a little difficult to differentiate from at points, and could have used more fleshing out in relation to the narrator. The author handles the triggering nature of the subject matter with care, not including numbers or graphic details.
The formatting feels inspired by Ellen Hopkins books, keeping the book easy to follow and read through. I did not care for the sections in which she is dreaming. They strayed from the plot of realism and didn't feel needed to convey the narrator's internal struggles. The instances in these chapters made character realizations feel too on the nose for the reader; 'the mysterious girl' being the most obvious.
And perhaps this memoir isn't meant for me. As someone who used to be an edgy teen, reading books like Wintergirls and Girl, Interrupted, this book felt much lighter. Younger readers, middle school and early high school, could likely find more value in this story.

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This was a beautiful heart wrenching story. It’s amazing to read of the real struggles of women’s fight for finding our own beauty and how it can have such a surmount influence in our lives. This book is something I wouldn’t usually pick up but I’m so glad that I had the chance to read it.

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A very real and moving read, showing how the pandemic effects. Very brave read, I would enjoy reading more from Charlotte in the future.

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This novel tugged at my heart strings. A heartbreaking coming-of-age story of a 14-year-old girl recovering from anorexia. This book made me cry ugly tears; the strain that children, especially teenagers, are put under by the idea of chasing 'perfection,' especially from the media and society, is horrendous.

As children, we are conditioned to believe that what we see in the media is the standard, and as teenagers, this influences our attitudes towards one another in school, dating, friendships, and relationships; which includes our own relationship with our own bodies.

Charlotte's anorexia, the destruction of lifelong friendships, and the agony of seeing her illness devastate her family as it threatens to destroy her are all front and centre in this gut-wrenching memoir; as the world reopens, she finds new connections and mentors as she tries to overcome and understand her illness.

As I type this, I'm choking up with tears again; as a woman in my twenties, this story hit so close to home for teenage me, reflecting how badly society as a whole has failed us and will fail our children if we attempt to turn it around before it's too late.

⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️

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Written with the prose of an author well beyond her years Bellows captures and retells the darkest moments of her year long fall and eventual recovery from an eating disorder.

I loved this book and it was so well written that serval times I was in awe that bellows is barely more than a child. She has lived such depth and tragedy but found such strength and beauty in it and found the strength to share it in this book. While I loved this book I did feel like the dream state chapters where she is in “the deep” to be distracting and slow. However, I can appreciate them for the purpose they have in her story.

I really would love to read more from Bellows if she ever publishes more. Wonderful author!!!

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"You're beautiful, Charlotte." Out of the countless beautiful lines written in this book, this quote is by far my favorite.
I don't think I've ever read a memoir so touching in my life. The stark contrast between her attitude towards food and body image at the beginning and her ideals during recovery was so relatable and genuine.

The struggle of COVID and being isolated for so long poisoned people with the idea of re-emerging differently, particularly with weight. "I was alone in my head, until one day I realized I wasn't." Eating disorders don't usually happen overnight. They worsen over time and get out of hand. Hospitals refuse to acknowledge someone needs help because they aren't 'skinny enough' to be admitted yet, despite visually decaying. "People see dying and mistake it for beauty."

"Why is beauty so painful?"
"How do you save girls from daily living?"
The constant poison present every day on social media creates such an unrealistic standard of beauty for young girls that digits on a scale and food packages determine their entire youth. "Society's current definition of beauty isn't even human." The demanding idea of altering your body to receive praise and be adored sets so much pressure on girls that they deprive their bodies and themselves of joy.

Charlotte's forgiveness and acceptance at the end were admiring, especially with her parents. Throughout the entire book, I was rooting for her and knew she'd have to want to get better for herself. "There's a future out there that I'll be alive for."

The title speaks for itself. 'You're beautiful, Charlotte." After starving herself and battling death for the false idea of beauty, Charlotte gets told she's beautiful as she recovers and gives her body the love it needs. Beauty is everything and everywhere. Giving it a single definition would remove its meaning entirely. I hope Charlotte honestly is living her most beautiful life and persists in writing. Her words are beyond beautiful and will only bloom as she continues.

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This was one of the most beautiful books I have ever read. The way she turned Ed into a character was so creative and helped show that it is not apart of you. I hope to see more from Charlotte.

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This is one of the most beautiful memoirs from a strong young author. Charlotte wrote her memoir about overcoming her eating disorder. She began writing this when she was 15 and later finished when she was 17.

Her story of overcoming her inner demons, her eating disorder, societal pressure and finding her inner beauty is extraordinary. She talks about “The Deep” and her captor, Ed in a meteorological way that any reader can understand the inner workings of her demons.

This book, I personally believe, will help so many girls and women struggling with their inner demons. Showing body positive and self love is achievable.

Thank you Netgalley and Freehand books for sharing the opportunity to read this beautiful memoir. An especially big thank you to Charlotte Bellows for sharing her journey.

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This could be the first memoir about eating disorders that take place in the 2020s that I have read. It was a well written book and Bellows is brave for sharing her story. Thanks to NetGalley for the ARC.

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This is an extraordinary first work by a promising young new author. She alternates between her real-life descent into life-threatenng anorexia and the struggle with parents and health professionals with noctural visits in a land called The Deep, where a boy named Ed (Eating Disorder) vows to protect her. He eventually becomes her captor. This is an excellent metaphor of the power of anorexia and bulimia to possess a person, and her writing does so magnificently. Her struggle to release herself from his grip and seek a healthy life is a result of a harrowing experience with him, but such is the impetus to healing from a chronic eating disorder. I look forward to more from this young writer.

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Bellows was in Grade 9 when the pandemic shut the world down. With time to spare, she set about trying to lose some weight—and, in the privacy of a world removed from everyone else, but with seemingly half the Internet determined to lose lockdown weight, a diet spiralled into an eating disorder.

I'm intrigued by this as something of a pandemic memoir. It's not at all the focus, but I've read enough articles talking about the impact of the pandemic on mental health, and on eating disorders more specifically, that this feels like the beginning of what might be a wave of memoirs about that. At one point Bellows' therapist observes that "The timing really is awful ... You have an eating disorder during a global pandemic. Normally, as part of the healing process, you would reconnect with teenage life. But now, with all these restrictions, you're stuck in a tricky situation" (loc. 792*). Isolation exacerbated by isolation, I suppose.

Bellows wrote "The Definition of Beautiful" while coming out of that eating disorder—and out of the more restrictive pandemic regulations—and while still a teenager. It's not entirely unique for that latter point, but this particular book is a truly impressive feat for a teenager. Writing a good story or essay is one thing, but managing a full-length book is another thing for anyone, let alone a teenager, and Bellows does an excellent job with pacing in particular, and with to-the-point but fully realized scenes. There are some places where I think age might help (more on that in a moment), but on the whole this puts a lot of adult-written memoirs to shame. (One of my primary thoughts while reading was "This is clearly someone who reads a lot", which is always a good feeling.)

Two things that didn't work as well for me: First, a fair amount of the book takes place in Bellows' dreams, in a place she calls the Deep, which I'm not particularly keen on. I'm not actually sure if it's all actual (lucid?) dreams she had or more of a literary device to illustrate where one's mind tends to live during an eating disorder, but whether fiction of nonfiction dreams have always felt too intangible to hold my focus when reading. (Personal preference and your mileage may vary.) And second, at times—especially early on in the book—word choices and phrasing tilted a bit far towards angst. The book makes up for it in taking a clear-eyed (and almost numbers-free) look at the experience of illness and recovery, but that's really the one thing where I think time and distance would be a benefit.

Here's hoping that Bellows keeps writing. It'll be interesting to see where she goes with it, either fiction or nonfiction.

Thanks to the author and publisher for providing a review copy through NetGalley.

*I read an ARC, and quotes may not be final.

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Charlotte Bellows memoir is both poignant and unflinching. This is a deeply personal account through the voice of teen protagonist Charlotte.
We are introduced to Charlotte who is struggling in a Post Covid world to find her identity. She is plagued by many of the insecurities which many of us have in modern life and this makes her narrative highly relatable.

As someone with an interest in young adult fiction the themes and discussion which this provoked are relevant to young teenagers but also to older readers who may be supporting someone with the same struggles.

I found this a memorable read although at times it challenged some of my own ideas of beauty and idealism in modern society.

Sometimes a reader needs a writer to reach deep into their soul to achieve a memorable work. Charlotte Bellows is an accomplished writer which this work shows.

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