Afbeelding van de auteur.

Amber Tamblyn

Auteur van Any Man

9+ Werken 566 Leden 21 Besprekingen Favoriet van 1 leden

Over de Auteur

Fotografie: Jerry Avenaim

Werken van Amber Tamblyn

Any Man (2018) 223 exemplaren
Dark Sparkler (2015) 111 exemplaren
Free Stallion: Poems (2005) 60 exemplaren
Bang Ditto (2009) 44 exemplaren
The Punishment Gift 4 exemplaren

Gerelateerde werken

Faithful (2016) — Verteller, sommige edities975 exemplaren
127 Hours [2010 film] (2011) 108 exemplaren
The Grudge 2 [2006 American film] (2006) — Actor; Actor — 60 exemplaren
Beyond a Reasonable Doubt [2009 film] (2009) — Actor — 37 exemplaren
Joan of Arcadia: The Complete Second Season (2006) — Actor — 21 exemplaren
The Russell Girl [2008 TV movie] (2008) — Actor — 10 exemplaren
Havoc 2: Normal Adolescent Behavior [2007 film] (2007) — Actor — 3 exemplaren
Y: The Last Man [2021 TV series] — Actor — 1 exemplaar

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Geboortedatum
1983-05-14
Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
USA
Geboorteplaats
Santa Monica, California, USA
Beroepen
actor
poet
Relaties
Tamblyn, Russ (father)

Leden

Besprekingen

Amber Tamblyn twists the #Me Too movement with this novel of male rape. Her arsenal of imaginative writing styles makes this an off the charts reading experience. Her whiplash use of poetry solidifies her brilliant voice. A page turner that flies off your conscious in a single sitting.
 
Gemarkeerd
GordonPrescottWiener | 8 andere besprekingen | Aug 24, 2023 |
Its about overview on feminism today.
 
Gemarkeerd
sana-nazar83 | 1 andere bespreking | Sep 8, 2022 |
I only know Amber Tamblyn from Joan of Arcadia and The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants, when I saw she authored a book I kind of assumed it would be the typical contemporary fiction. I was wrong. Way wrong. This is about the aftermath of a sick woman ruining lives. This book was amazing. I wasn't a fan of the poetry aspect though.
 
Gemarkeerd
Koralis | 8 andere besprekingen | Jul 12, 2022 |
Wow. This book! Amber Tamblyn took a hard subject and wrote an amazing book. When I came across this book I had been following the Johnny Depp/Amber Heard case. I knew men could be victimized. I was a victim of domestic violence and then took a 40 hour training. My eyes were opened during that training. I thought a lot about how we see domestic violence in this country. There were no shelters for men to go to. Fathers had no support in taking their children and going somewhere safe for even a night, just to get theirselves together. When I asked why, I was told men could afford a hotel. Some men maybe but certainly not all. If we go by that some women could afford a hotel. Pressing the issue, I was told men could go to a homeless shelter, they didn’t need to take their children with. I didn’t understand those reasons any more than they could afford a hotel. But I was encouraged by the fact that men were included in my training. Over the years, I have come across a few male victims. I listened to them and tried to help. I always felt there were many more, the silent ones. This book is not about domestic violence. It is about victims of sexual crimes.
When I read the synopsis of this book, I was extremely curious. It was written by a female, an actress. I wondered how she would handle men as victims. Very few believed Johnny Depp. I didn’t hear all of Hollywood supporting him. I still don’t in the face of staggering evidence. So I was very interested in what Amber Tamblyn had to write.
She wrote a searing, can’t put down, novel. I thought she did a phenomenal job portraying the victims. The pain and the shame they lived with, all the victims. The bravery of the male victims in speaking out. It is a very thought provoking book. A book we should be reading and talking about. I don’t think it will be in most book clubs though. The subject matter is not one we openly talk about. It’s still the dirty secret. It needs to be spoken about. Victims are victims. They need support. They need to be believed.
We say we want equality but doesn’t that mean we want the rules to be the same regardless of sex, race or religion? Doesn’t that mean we need to accept that a victim can be any one of us? The perpetrator can be any one of us? This book has the potential to open up dialogue about supporting victims. Women, men, adult, child, any race or religion. In her use of different men, including a male child, Ms Tamblyn brings this message home. Her final victim plays an important part in this. We need to start accepting, start supporting, start talking and find the solution to start healing all the victims. Read this book. Think about it. Talk about it.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
Wulfwyn907 | 8 andere besprekingen | Jan 30, 2022 |

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Statistieken

Werken
9
Ook door
11
Leden
566
Populariteit
#44,192
Waardering
3.9
Besprekingen
21
ISBNs
29
Talen
1
Favoriet
1

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