Book Banter: Molly Ringwald and growing pains in your 30s
(229 pages)Every now and then I like to read a book that isn’t too demanding in the concentration department. From my university days and all the English classes analyzing plot, motifs and examining character development, etc., I like to give my brain a break with fluff pieces, sit with it and daydream type of feel good stories. Similar to relaxing in front of the TV with a fun show I identify as brain candy.
When I heard my make-believe friend Molly Ringwald published her first book recently, I had to see for myself what Miss Molly had to share with the world.
Molly Ringwald gets a haircut like the rest of us. She works for a living, travels, raises a family, keeps family and friends close, then writes about her personal growth, all while questioning a sense of self. So why should we care? Why is her book of any significance now?

After two miscarriages — the second at five months — they decided to adopt. More than anything, they wanted a family. The babe in the photo wore a white dress with blue polka dots. Her cheeks were chubby, eyebrows arched in surprise, lower lip
When I heard my make-believe friend Molly Ringwald published her first book recently, I had to see for myself what Miss Molly had to share with the world. Molly Ringwald gets a haircut like the rest of us. She works for a living, travels,
But there are many other prisoners who, one might argue, are victims themselves – of poverty, of poor parenting, of drug addiction – and who have ended up here, in part, because of the family and area in which they grew up; most of the 10000 prisoners



