Mariah Carey Memoirs Of An Imperfect Angel Review

You don’t have to be a Lamb to love this book. You just have to know what it feels like to build a palace over a fault line, hoping the ground doesn’t shake.

If you came for the gossip about J.Lo or Tommy Mottola, the book delivers. But the real takeaway is something heavier. This is not a memoir of an "imperfect angel"—it is a memoir of a resilient one. The first thing that strikes you about the book is the violence of Mariah’s childhood. Raised biracial in a pre-Civil Rights era Long Island, she never quite fit anywhere. Her white mother denied her reflection, and her Black father was largely absent. The "imperfect angel" nickname came from a childhood of screaming matches, smashed porcelain angels, and a home life so chaotic that music became the only safe room. mariah carey memoirs of an imperfect angel

We learn that the "Bipolar Disorder" diagnosis she received in 2001 (which she initially rejected) was actually the missing puzzle piece to her manic highs and suicidal lows. She reframes the "Glitter" era—often cited as the worst flop in music history—not as a career suicide, but as a psychotic breakdown caused by overwork and emotional abuse. You don’t have to be a Lamb to love this book

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