Cover Image: Returning Home to Our Bodies

Returning Home to Our Bodies

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Member Reviews

I appreciated the topic of this book and many of the authors insights. The timing of this book is also very appropriate. I wish the research being pulled from was more clearly traceable in the work. Overall, I enjoyed this book.

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A very grounded and much needed book, i highlighted so many passages that i thought were poignant. I love the way this book shifts the way i see and operate in the world, using examples from my very biology. I appreciate the author’s tangible effort to make the book a safe space for as many readers as possible. Whenever she put this effort in, i really felt reassured. I only gave it less stars due to how it didnt captivate me as actively as i expected. I kept rereading sentences when i’d open it. The pacing felt really slow. I dont know how to remedy that, because the book’s goal is to help us remember our bodies’ natural way of existing, and that is a process that requires slowing down, breathing, feeling. Maybe it wouldve worked better for me as a physical book rather than an e-book. I imagine, with a physical copy, I could’ve been more contemplative, meditative. I may have even kept it with my journal so I could sip tea, write, and read. This seems like the perfect book for that kind of atmosphere

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This was difficult to engage with, seemed repetitive, and didn’t have many sources to cite despite having footnotes for explanations.

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Returning Home to Our Bodies by Abigail Rose Clarke reads like a soft love letter to the body.

Some people might enjoy reading this gentle, repetitive, though somewhat condescending, science-lite, fluffy, self-help book on somatic experiencing.

Thank you to NetGalley and Publishers for access to this ARC. All opinions are my own.

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I really struggled with this title. It was hard for me to read as a white-passing person of color, who recognizes my own skin color privilege, and I found it hard to relate to the author. I also found it incredibly frustrating that she had footnotes for definitions but no citations anywhere for her “studies” that she did not specify.

I am still learning about somatic therapy (which is highly contested, and still controversial) soI had a harder time following along because I did not feel like her book for clear for the layman. I understand most other therapy models, have taken psychology courses, and am schooled in philosophy using Freud, etc. I am not a novice but somewhere at beginning intermediate understand.

I cannot in good conscience recommend this to anyone. It seems more like rambling thoughts from an altered state of consciousness than actual advice.

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This was my first nonfiction novel I decided to pick and read and I am so glad I did! This novel teaches you how our bodies and the earth and our surroundings all work together! Such a cute read and very educational!

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I requested the arc for this book honestly because the topic interests me. I wish I could say I grasped all that was written, but what I did understand I deeply enjoyed. I believe I now I have ideas of what books to start off with to then circle back around to this one. I believe it has a lot for me to learn in it. I really enjoy the practice of being fluid like a body of water because we are a body of water. That practice resonated with me.

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