5/5
I thought this book was going to be old white woman, wine mom bullshit, and in some ways it is. But as a melanated male urban youth, this book changed my life, and now I earnestly believe that Michelle Pfeiffer really could change the lives of a bunch of teenagers.
To be honest, I bought this book as a joke. I thought it would be funny to have on my bookshelf and that it would be a nice bit to bring up with friends. I was not religious before reading this book (although I had gone to a Catholic school). But the contents of this book really did change my life and allowed me to open my heart to love and Christ.
The book itself deals with Marianne's life and her reflections on A Course In Miracles, a slightly older book that I still have yet to read. But a better way to understand the book is not as two separate aspects, but as a reflection by the author herself and how the principles she adopted from A Course In Miracles changed her own life. It didn't solve all her problems. If you've read about her, you'd know her life has continued since and she's had her own troubles. But as she framed it, the Course gave her life meaning as she could finally fill the void inside her and truly embrace love.
