Through Her Eyes: A Memoir of Purpose and Courage

Through Her Eyes follows Jennifer Gauthier as she grows from a noisy, painful childhood into the role of founder and CEO of a nonprofit that centers healing, youth, and community. The book moves through her early years in a home shaped by addiction, her teenage pregnancy, homelessness, and single motherhood, then into her spiritual searching, discovery of Sufism, and her work as a mentor and leader. Along the way, she keeps circling one core message. Your story is yours to claim, even if the first chapters were written by other people.

I felt her voice first, more than any single scene. The writing is direct and chatty, like a friend talking with no filter. She warns you early that she is “that person” who talks to strangers in line and laughs too loud, and the prose matches that energy. I liked that she keeps the language simple and straight. She uses a lot of short, punchy lines, and she often drops into story mode with “Throwback” sections that read like spoken-word pieces. That style pulled me in. I could almost hear her accent, see her hands moving while she talked. She jumps from memory to lesson to side story in quick turns, and sometimes I wanted a bit more shape or pause, a little more space to sit with one scene before we moved on to the next.

Emotionally, the book hit me hardest when she wrote about addiction, codependency, and the way a child tries to manage a house that feels unstable. Her honesty about wanting her father to die, then shifting into years of praying for him to live sober, landed with real weight. There is no polish on those parts, and I appreciated that. I also liked her insistence on personal responsibility without erasing systems and trauma. She talks about racism, privilege, generational patterns, and spiritual harm, and still looks straight at herself and asks, “What can I control today.” I would have liked more direct talk about structural barriers, especially given her work with underserved communities. Even so, the through-line of “I will not stay stuck” felt honest to her story and background.

I walked away feeling like I had spent time with a real person, not a polished brand. The book would be a strong fit for readers who grew up around addiction, teen parents, people who have experienced trauma and are now ready to look at it, and anyone in social work, education, or youth programs who wants a reminder of what their clients might be carrying. It will also speak to women building something from scratch in midlife, especially those who feel “too loud” or “too much.” If you want a raw, talky, spiritually curious, no-nonsense story from someone who has actually had to claw her way forward, I recommend Through Her Eyes.

Pages: 228 | ASIN : B0GCFCTHLL

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The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.

Posted on February 17, 2026, in Book Reviews, Four Stars and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

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