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Messy Thrilling Life : The Art of Figuring Out How to Live

Messy Thrilling Life : The Art of Figuring Out How to Live

List Price: $23.95
Your Price: $16.29
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Messy Lives are Okay
Review: I bought this book during a time when my life was beyond messy. When I got home, I filled up the tub with a hot water and bubbles and stepped in with my new book and a waterbottle. As I flipped each page, reading...getting an inside look at Sabrina's pain, joy, trials and adventures, I cried, I put myself in her pages...I was inspired to be true to my own feelings in my art..and was assured that having a messy time in my life was something that would cause me to GROW..to discover truths about myself. I knew I wasn't alone. I love this book.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Good, but...
Review: I feel really bad writing this, because Sabrina has been one of the biggest inspirations to me, and my copies of her previous works are dog-earred and completely pre-loved.

And I was utterly unbearably excited about this one. So I sat down with a nice rich hot chocolate and a spare hour..

The truth is though, I truly don't think this work is as good. Not to say I regret buying it or I wouldn't recommend it, but I suggest that people do not expect another 'Spilling Open.'

I feel like a lot of pages are wasted. There is a huge amount of photography, and some are truly beautiful works, but others are completely uninspiring and seem like page-fillers. What seems like endless pages of out-of-focus buildings and blocks of colours. This is particularly so with the first half of the book, though the second half does improve as she moves from New York.

Additionally, the other works contained a discernible story, or a gradual coming-of-age or at least, the progress of her life could be followed. This stops as quickly as it begins. The pages do not progress from each other and you get absolutely no sense of her and her common tribulations, which was what made the other books so divine. When she does write, the words are so close together and fumbled that it makes reading sentences somewhat difficult.

Sabrina seems to want to move into books of straight art rather than journals, and I am not suggesting that she revert to something that no longer appeals to her. Perhaps though, it should be remembered what was so appealing and original about the first books. If I wanted a book of photography, I could have found a million of those. If she wants to make an art or photography book, I just feel she shouldn't hide behind the guise of a journal, which this is really not.

It just seems very detached, far less intimate and colder than her previous works. Far less fumbling, but far far less appealing.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: she's done spilling open
Review: Remember this--- Sabrina isn't 22 and wide-eyed anymore, so it only makes sense that her views change, she's not so excited to "know who she is". she's just living. I wanted more text, less art, but otherwise, she shows her evolution well.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Wonderful Mess!
Review: Sabrina has done it again--choreography with art, photography and pros. In her third visual treat in book form she once again delights the heart and tickles the spirit with memories and images that explode off of every page. This time out, there are not as many of Sabrina's insightful pros, but her unique style of scrawling words as an integral part of her art makes the reading adventure an act of diligent discovery. Some will find it challenging. I love it and I'm not a young man. I applaud Sabrina for following her own muse throughout the creative and publishing process. (As an author, I know that's not always an easy experience.) With fewer words, though, there is room for a greater number of her brilliant and evocative photos that invite us to crawl inside and wonder around. From her love of colorful shoes to her many beautiful lady friends, her talented father, and old books on the street, she takes us on a magical journey through the marvelous messiness of life. Her drawings continue to dazzle and inspire this life-long sketcher. Get this--or any of Sabrina's three books-- and crawl in and join the dance!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wonderful!
Review: Sweet, honest, real, and beautiful book. Obviously, Sabrina is
all of these things also. Highly recommended.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A Reluctant Writer?
Review: Was Sabrina depressed during the process of creating her third book? She was living in New York when 9/11 happened, which would dull anyone's creativity for a while, but add to that her insecurities in the city and the breakup with a seemingly kindred soul boyfriend and you get one sad book.

It also seems like she's holding back, like she just had to fulfill a book contract, so she only wrote the bare minimum about her life. At the same time there are passages of vulnerable honesty, and parts where her true "spilling" nature seeps out.

Much of the art stands on its own and I would enjoy looking at it in a gallery. As far as the photographs go, I was dissapointed with the duplicates in the same book and the fact that she included photos from her previous books. If every precious page should be a burst of fresh art, she seemed to be doing some recycling -- such as the three redundant photos of Laurie (the same Laurie Wagner who wrote the excellent forward, I presume? I'd love to read a journal by her!)

One thing about publishing your private thoughts is you have to accept that people will comment on your life. Sabrina, many of us fell in love with "Spilling Open" because you took us on a journey into your inner world, written without censor. Years have passed, things have changed, and your fans still want to go on that journey with you -- we want every Messy, Thrilling detail of your Life -- and sadly, this book did not achieve that.


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