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Celebrity Detox
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Celebrity Detox
Author: Rosie O'Donnell

Book Information
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Book Type: Hardcover
Rating:

ISBN-13: 9780446582247 - ISBN-10: 0446582247
Publication Date: 10/2/2007
Pages: 224

Book Description:
Sometimes funny, sometimes heartbreaking, and always brutally honest, this is Rosie O'Donnell's surprising account of the pain, regret, and euphoria involved in withdrawing from celebrity life -- and the terrifying dangers of relapsing into the spotlight.

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Top Member Book Reviews

Tish O. (tish) - NJ wrote on 11/23/2007...

7 member(s) found this review helpful.

Am I the only one who thought this book was a waste of Paper? i am a big Rosie fan and this look into her life made me feel sad that she is not getting the help that she so obviously needs. yes, at times it was funny but to me, it also shows a woman who is on the edge of oblivian.

Liz L. (Pekkah) - ME wrote on 1/10/2008...

5 member(s) found this review helpful.

I don't normally read books about celebs or by celebs. Until reading this book I really knew little about Rosie other than what the news media likes to show the public (ususally her loud and brash side). I have never watched an episode of The View or of Rosie's syndicated show. This book shows you the side of Rosie that the news media tends to conveniently forget about. It shows her human-ness. It shows a fierce mama who adores her kids and cherishes her time with them. It shows the struggles of a woman trying to stay true to herself and just be who she is - sometimes pushing people's buttons along the way. While I don't always 100% agree with Rosie, particularly with some of her political views, this book gives me a newfound respect for her and the next time the news media splashes Rosie tabloid headlines my way, I will definately see them in a different light now that I've had a peek at what makes this woman tick.

Sharon S. (dancinagain) wrote on 2/20/2008...

3 member(s) found this review helpful.

This was an unpolished and very raw picture of what life is like as a celebrity when the cameras are off and on.
Obviously anothe reviewer missed the whole point of the book. Rosie is through with trying to "be" what everyone wants her to be. She's not the queen of nice - it was an image portrayed by the media. Why do you want people to be what they are not?
It's not easy being in tabloid headlines - because that's what people believe is true - not what is real.
Anyway, the book is Rosie for real - and someone who is passionate about her beliefs. If you don't agree with her fine, but no reason to expect anything different.

Suzanne B. (SuzanneB) wrote on 12/28/2007...

3 member(s) found this review helpful.

Extremely brief (read it in one sitting). Rosie's version (& not necessarily the actual version, I think) of her controversial year on "The View." Left me thinking that she is not just strange, but kind of crazy, and perhaps she had better withdraw from public life forever.

(RockStarGirl) wrote on 12/26/2007...

3 member(s) found this review helpful.

There's really not a whole lot of positive things to say about this book. It felt like I was reading Rosie's whiney, over-dramatized diary. The two main things she covers in the book is her obsession with Barbara Streisand and her disappointment in Barbara Walters. At times, Rosie becomes very self-absorbed and almost non-coherant. If there is a point to this book, I must have missed it.

Suzanne S. (Suzgot2) wrote on 8/14/2008...

2 member(s) found this review helpful.

Read it if you like Rosie and gossip.Otherwise, save your energy for something worthwhile.

Karen H. (KarenHorvath) wrote on 1/9/2008...

2 member(s) found this review helpful.

This book is sour grapes. She should have left all of this unsaid. I loved her old show, but I didn't enjoy her on the View, because she wasn't doing what she was famous for, being "nice" and funny; someone people could identify with. Much of the time, she came off as overbearing, depressive, and sadly not educated enough to be taken seriously. The show is watched as a vicrious enjoyable coffe klatch, and not "Nightline".


Please Rate these Book Reviews

LuAnne G. (Lubear) wrote on 8/29/2008...


I enjoyed this book. It was an easy read, light-hearted at times while examining her life and emotional perspective deeply at other times. I really liked the perspective. She was real and down to earth. She admits there are two sides to every story and this is just her side. Although it touched on her roots and mentions how she got her start, it is more details about her job with the View, Barbara Streisand, and Barbara Walters.
It also had some details about her life and job with her own show. It explains how once being a celebrity she began feeling less authentic and less real the more she was on display.

Alyssa H. (bluebonnets) wrote on 4/1/2008...


As far as celebrity memoirs/autobiographies go, this one seemed to just fall flat. I don't think it accomplished it's intended goal, which, if you believe the blurbs on the cover, is that it "...illuminates not only what it's like to be a celebrity, but also what it's like to be a mother, a daughter, a leader, a friend, a sister, a wife...in short, a human being."

I am all of the things described by the blurb (well, obviously not a celebrity!), and yet, I simply didn't feel that this book resonated with me. Maybe I had unreasonable expectations, but I had hoped that while writing about how she is just a normal person, who got wrapped up in the celebrity game, she would show how there is a commonality between me, a heterosexual wife and mother in Texas, to her, a homosexual wife and mother in California; unfortunately, I just didn't feel that connection.


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