Growing Up Duggar: It’s All About Relationships is by Jana, Jill,
Jessa, and Jinger Duggar, the four oldest girls in a family of nineteen
children. These stars of TLC’s popular reality show, 19 Kids & Counting, share
never-before told stories of growing up in the Duggar household and offer
readers a closer look at who they are and what they really believe in their
first book.
As the subtitle indicates, the
theme of this book is relationships, and each chapter focuses on a different
one: relationship with yourself, your parents, your siblings, friends, guys,
culture, your country and the world. The girls chose not to have a separate chapter
on your relationship with God because that is fundamental, not in addition, to
every other relationship.
The first chapter covers your
relationships with yourself. Jessa shares about a time when she continually
compared herself to others and felt she didn’t measure up. “I had friends who
were really beautiful, and whenever we were together I compared myself to them
and always came up lacking something.”She goes on to tell how she learned there
are ten unchangeable things that we each must accept about ourselves, and that when
we reject ourselves we ultimately reject God’s creation.
Known for their conservative
views, the Duggars harbor plenty of questions about their views on dating. Disagreeing
with society’s norm of casual dating, the family follows a practice called courtship,
or dating with a purpose. Several principles of courtship are shared, such as
getting to know someone in real-life settings: “Getting to know the special
young man we’re interested in within a family setting is one of the biggest
differences in dating and courtship. . . . We want to see how he reacts to
normal family events.” Then, after sharing some of the character qualities the
girls look for in potential life partners, older brother Josh and his wife of
five years, Anna, share their courtship story.
: : Jessa, Jinger, Jana, Jill : : |
Jana, Jill, Jessa, and Jinger
wrote this book to help answer some of the many questions they receive from
curious fans in letters and emails, and to empower, hopefully, readers to use
their own lives to benefit others. With a ministry schedule longer than even
their tv show seems to evidence, these girls are sure to inspire readers to
make a difference in the world themselves.
Both thought-provoking and
entertaining with stories of the younger kids’ antics, I found this book an
enjoyable read and would recommend it, along with the Duggar parents’ books The Duggars: 20 & Counting and A Love That Multiples, both to those who
have just heard of this family and are curious, and to long-time fans.
Wow, the all look so much the same! Gorgeous. Their family sounds pretty awesome :)
ReplyDeleteHaha you think so? :) Well I think they're pretty awesome anyways :P lol
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