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  • 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 = fire

  • 🔥🔥🔥🔥 = pretty good

  • 🔥🔥🔥 = okay

  • 🔥🔥 = pretty bad

  • 🔥 = hot garbage

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#GIRLBOSS

#GIRLBOSS

#GIRLBOSS flashes its bold letters, displaying an edgy Sophia Amoruso for all to see. Amoruso embodies the “American dream”: she’s a self-made woman who founded the small-time eBay store, Nasty Gal, at age 22, which is now—10 years later—worth 280 million. Same.

Amoruso does seem to want the same for you…kind of. The book is part autobiography, part female empowerment manifesto. It details Amoruso’s rocky past. It also speaks to her innate work ethic and ability to hustle hard even when everything works against you. The resounding theme throughout her story: she is different and she achieved success via her own winding, eccentric path. I don’t want to demean her accomplishments—she’s done a whole lot more than I have, and who am I to downgrade her girlbossishness? I will say, that from a literary perspective, her rebelliousness reads cliché. There’s so much emphasis on her uniqueness that she becomes an obvious archetype of “the weirdo”. I kept thinking, we get it; you’re so uncool that you’re actually too cool.

This is where I get confused. The book advertises itself as an inspirational guide to exceptional entrepreneurship—read this and realize that you too can follow your dreams, if you just set your mind to it. Yet, as an autobiography, it hones in on so many specifics of Amoruso’s life that you see her situation is an exception, not the rule. Sure, her story can still be inspiring, but don’t expect to be able to model her approach. Her milkshake brings all the boys to the yard, and they’re like it’s better than yours; damn right, it’s better than yours, she can teach you, but she has to charge. So, she does charge, by selling her book. Your milkshake is inferior.

I was initially wary of this book because I feared it’d get really cheesy really quickly. I’m totally into women supporting women, but I feared basic platitudes like “abandon anything about your life and habits that might be holding you back” and “out of the bajillions of things in this universe that you can’t control, what you can control is how hard you try” (Amoruso, 14 and 235). These suggestions are a little no-duh-y.

What do I like about this book? She’s funny, and that comes across loud and clear in her writing. She uses a conversational tone, which entertains me even if it doesn’t necessarily rouse me. Amoruso eats, sleeps, and breathes Nasty Gal, and her enthusiasm is impressive. If you want to read a sassy go-getter comically explain how she went and got stuff, then this is for you. If you want concrete suggestions for how to turn your business into reality, then look elsewhere.

“A #GIRLBOSS is someone who’s in charge of her own life. She gets what she wants because she works for it” (Amoruso, 11). She doesn’t really acknowledge her luck, which in my opinion seems a little tone-deaf. Overall, I’m a little too cynical to fully get behind her generic advice; at the same time, I appreciate the piece for what it is: a good story about one successful person told in a funny manner. Amoruso’s book balances at 3 out of 5 flames.


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Post Office

Post Office

Everything Is Illuminated

Everything Is Illuminated