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My Pretty Baby: Seeking Truth and Finding Healing

My Pretty Baby is Wendy B. Correa’s tender and searching memoir about growing up inside loss, neglect, alcoholism, and family secrecy, then spending a lifetime trying to turn that pain into understanding. The book begins with a child’s bewildered grief after her father’s death, deepens through her mother’s relationship with a volatile alcoholic stepfather, and follows Wendy into music, Buddhism, therapy, sobriety, Native American ceremony, yoga, motherhood, and marriage. Along the way, she brushes against extraordinary cultural moments, from the Beatles on Ed Sullivan to Joni Mitchell’s living room to Aspen and Hunter S. Thompson, but the real heartbeat of the book is quieter and more intimate. It’s the lifelong question beneath everything: what happened to my family, and how do I survive what I inherited?

What moved me most was how vividly Correa writes from inside the body of her younger self. She doesn’t just tell us she was afraid, she lets us feel the air leave the room. The closing of her father’s casket, the stench of carnations, the Christmas tree hurled to the floor, the child trying to protect her mother from a man who has become suddenly terrifying, these scenes have a terrible immediacy. I admired the way she keeps returning to sensory memory without making it ornamental. Smell, music, weather, smoke, lilacs, cold water, mountain air, all of it becomes part of the emotional architecture. Sometimes the book’s detail is almost overwhelming, but I think that’s also part of its honesty. Trauma doesn’t arrive in tidy summaries. It comes back as fragments, textures, songs, rooms, and smells you can’t quite wash out of your mind.

Correa is writing about healing, but she’s not selling some glossy version of transcendence. Her Buddhism, AA meetings, therapy, sweat lodges, vision quest, yoga, and eventual work with birth and body care all feel like attempts to live more fully inside a self that was once trained to disappear. I liked that the book allows love and anger to coexist, especially in her complicated feelings about Paul, who is frightening and damaging, yet also later tender with her son Mateo. That moral grayness gives the memoir real weight. The final DNA revelations could have felt melodramatic in another writer’s hands. Here, they feel like the last hidden door opening in a house she’s been wandering through all her life.

By the end, I felt that My Pretty Baby had earned its hope. It carries the sprawl of a real life, with its repetitions, ruptures, misreadings, longings, and late-arriving mercies. Correa’s writing is most powerful when she trusts the lived scene and lets the ache speak for itself, and her central idea feels hard-won: the truth may not repair the past, but it can finally let a person breathe. I’d recommend this book to readers who appreciate intimate memoirs about family trauma, recovery, spiritual seeking, complicated forgiveness, and the slow, brave work of becoming whole.

Pages: 318 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DWNGSF4P

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