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Greenleaf Book Group
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She Took a Turn
Finding your true path isn’t easy. Sometimes, you’ve got to take a sharp turn. Early in her life, Kristi’s path was set. She traveled on the straight and narrow as an unquestioning Christian and dutiful daughter. This prescribed route, through her debutante ball and into medical school, set her up for success—and settled her into a life that never felt like her own. In her memoir She Took a Turn, Kristi Smith gives fresh insight into the challenging work of self-reflection and blazing one’s true trail. Kristi invites us inside her childhood memories and adult journeys, sharing stories from an entertaining and thought-provoking cast of characters who inspired her to open her mind and change her course. This story of startling new thoughts and steps—through personal, professional, political, and spiritual growth—is a surprising celebration of authenticity. As Kristi takes her turn, she invites us to do the same, giving us courage and tools for our own exploration. She also entertains and inspires us, modeling how one woman learned to respect every path while on a journey to discover her own.
Reviews
From her birth, Smith’s family expected she would grow up to be “a wealthy, conservative, Christian, medical doctor who trained up North” but returned to Alabama, where her debutante training would “attract a White male of appropriate social and financial standing.” As the title of her debut memoir suggests, Smith chose her own path, sometimes frustrating those who preferred her to be the “equivalent of wet cement—able to be molded.” With graceful prose and hard-won insight, Smith explores the roots of a mid-life crisis and lack of satisfaction. Smith eventually wills herself to “figure out what I learned from each ghost that haunts me,” finding both comfort and challenges in her Christian faith, and seeking a way to live a life of “radical generosity and meaning,” a desire that sometimes jolts those she loves most.

Smith’s own brilliant mother left work and schooling behind to become a traditional Southern woman and mother—and then seemed to expect to live vicariously through her daughter. Smith’s father, an orthopedic surgeon, provided a life of privilege—“The word my family uses is ‘blessed,’” Smith notes. She contemplates this with a sense of awareness and responsibility as she reflects on a life spent “always moving toward something”: pursuing a career in teaching instead of medicine; missionary work in Nigeria; tough but rewarding time teaching in Boston’s Southie neighborhood. But Smith still sought the source of her angst, even after marriage and becoming a mother to four children. After a breast cancer diagnosis at age 43, Smith turns to writing to answer core questions about who she is.

Readers who, like Smith, found guidance and wisdom in the works of Glennon Doyle and Elizabeth Gilbert will enjoy this journey and its inviting life lessons as Smith learns which dreams to keep, which to let go, and how to learn from the past and accept people for who they are.

Takeaway: Searching memoir of finding one’s own path and living for something more.

Comparable Titles: Glennon Doyle’s Untamed, Elizabeth Gilbert’s Eat, Pray, Love.

Production grades
Cover: A
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A-

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