Member Reviews
This was a great read, enjoyed it thoroughly, was hooked from the first page, loads of twists and turns, would recommend it x |
This was a fantastic look into life as a teenage girl in the late 60s/ early 70s in California. The summers of love, sex, peace and drugs, and never staying in the same place for any amount of time. I really enjoyed this and the author did so well in taking the reader along for the journey into finding her place in the world and what it meant to be a woman who wanted more for herself than just marriage and kids in a time when no more was expected of them. Great story! |
Abby S, Reviewer
A memoir of growing up in the 1970s.A book of communes drug trips life lived on the edge.Hippie culture comes alive i the authors intimate stories.#netgalley#shewritespress |
This is an enjoyable memoir about growing up/coming of age/finding yourself in the 1960s. If you're a fan of the period or books about it, you'll probably enjoy it. I didn't quite connect to Dukett but generally enjoyed the book. |
Media 572081
Good book. A fresh take on 60s escapism and self-discovery. Not ground-breaking but very enjoyable.. Avoids many of the cliches of writing about this era and is a lot more questioning of motives of many people the protagonist comes across - parents, fellow travellers, drug advocates, employers. |
No Rules by Sharon Duckett, is a look back on her life through the hippie movement. She is bored in her existence living a mundane life at home with her overbearing parents, a mom who parents from fear. She jumps at the chance to runaway with her sister to a new life full of, freedom, drugs and sex. What could possibly go wrong? Although this book was enjoyable, I feel that I was not connected to the main character. There was not enough feeling & emotion in the telling of her story. This book was just okay for me. |
Sharon Duket''s No Rules reminded me a bit of Mary Karr's Cherry. California - the 70s.... it all kind of works in my head. Sharon and her sister - with three months rent and a $50 vehicle - run away to California and live a true hippy life. her sister soon grows bored of this lifestyle and returns home - while Sharon stays and becomes involved in the grass roots feminist movement of the early 1970s. It's an insiders look at a time that has been written about and portrayed on tv and film. Sharon holds nothing back - drugs and sad stories are included in this book - but she does so with a lightness and a tone that evokes a conversation with a friend. Thanks to NetGalley and the publishers for the opportunity to read and review this book. |
Fun. Adventure. Freedom. Go where you wanna go. Do what you wanna do. The word wanna is from the lyrics of a popular song back in the day. Escape your mundane teen existence in the early '70s and live the hippie life. Sharon Dukett did it, but "No Rules: A Memoir" makes it sound like it wasn’t all that wonderful. Memories of drug-taking bored me. Recollections of road trips thrilled me. Other accounts saddened me. I wanted empathy or sympathy for the teen from almost 50 years ago. So many more emotions were involved, and because of that, I recommend the book. Many thanks to She Writes Press and NetGalley for the ARC. |




