Book review: ‘The Lost Girls’ by Jen Baggett, Holly Corbett and Amanda Pressner

Three friends are about to embark on the adventure of a lifetime: a year’s free pass away from friends, family and work obligations; a chance to see the world and participate in customs once viewed only on TV shows or in novels.

The catch? Well, there isn’t one — except for the fact that Holly, Jen and Amanda are all choosing to leave behind their relatively stable lives in New York City to pursue an uncharted course. All headed toward a dreaded quarter-life crisis, the ladies ponder what their next steps will be: in their relationships, cutthroat jobs and busy existences away from home. A journey away from it all seems like an opportunity they can’t let escape.

And so begins Jennifer Baggett, Holly Corbett and Amanda Pressner’s The Lost Girls, a travel memoir about friendship, acceptance, culture and life on the road. Through the pages of this 500-page tome, we dance with locals in Brazil, assist nurses and the sick in Kenya, study yoga in India and so, so much more. It’s a lengthy book but a worthwhile read, and one that had me eager to collect a few more stamps on my passport.

Just not quite the way they did.

Could I imagine essentially “quitting” my life for a year to travel the globe, meeting strangers and sleeping in hostels and using a bathroom that isn’t really a “bathroom” at all? Absolutely not. In the year in which Amanda, Jen and Holly plan their trek, they save money relentlessly — and vow to live as cheaply as possible while traversing the countries they start to call home. It’s impossible not to draw parallels between The Lost Girls and Eat, Pray, Love, Elizabeth Gilbert’s chronicle of her time traveling after a painful divorce. Though none of the authors leave New York in search of enlightenment persay, quite the way I believe Gilbert did, they still come home completely different people.

Not that that’s any shock.

The memoir is told in chapters alternating between Jen, Holly and Amanda’s points of view and, as a reader, I thought this worked well; we get to hear everyone’s side of the story. At times I struggled to distinguish between each narrator’s voice, though I think that’s a testament to their similar writing talents and friendship; though their opinions of each place differed, their presentation was largely the same.

I related most to Holly, a writer struggling to sustain her passionate but distant relationship with boyfriend Elan, an actor. Holly was the bold and athletic member of their trio, always managing to get in a run or embark on a new project — regardless of the country where they were currently storing their backpacks. More than anything, I admired the ladies’ ability to live simply but beautifully — and to be brave and bold enough to attempt something this adventurous.

As a book, their tales felt a little long . . . and, at times, repetitive. New country. New people. New guys. Throw into a pot and simmer, then serve and repeat. But that didn’t mean I didn’t still enjoy the story overall and curiously read about each new experience — because it was fun and total escapism, plus it portrayed their friendships both positively and negatively . . . so, you know, realistically. Though they don’t sugarcoat their experiences in developing countries, they’re always careful to highlight both the challenges and triumphs in each place — and I felt like, overall, I got a good feel for each of their destinations.

My favorite chapter dealt with Amanda, Jen and Holly’s time in Kenya, where they volunteered with a nonprofit and worked with young women living at a nearby boarding school and given the chance for a real education. The students’ fascination with Western women and American culture was eye-opening, and I loved the scene where the authors are able to share music through their iPods with the girls or actually watch a movie — something the Kenyan girls had never experienced. Simple things we take for granted. Simple concepts that are anything but simple elsewhere in the world.

Don’t be too discouraged by its girth and my drawbacks — despite the size of The Lost Girls, this travel memoir is very readable, interesting and compelling . . . especially to twenty-somethings with a taste for the open road and desire to think about what comes “next.” I enjoyed the epilogue, too; a satisfying conclusion to a satisfying journey.


4 out of 5!

ISBN: 0061997390 ♥ GoodreadsLibraryThingAmazonAuthor Website
Review copy provided by TLC Book Tours

15 thoughts on “Book review: ‘The Lost Girls’ by Jen Baggett, Holly Corbett and Amanda Pressner

  1. I saw a blurb about this one posted online a few weeks ago, and it definitely caught my eye — I like the idea of just taking off and spending a year globetrotting with your closest friends, but in reality? Totally not sure I could *do* it … Perchance I shall leave my extended trotting to vicarious experiences, like finding a copy of this and reading 🙂

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  2. I’ve been wanting to read this book since I first heard about it, and your glowing, but honest, review only makes me want to read it more!

    I have been following The Lost Girls’ blog for the past year as well, and I think it’s wonderful. Even if you can’t traipse around the world for a year, they offer a little something for every “lost girl.”

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  3. A while ago my friend said her friend had written a travel memoir with her friends about taking off from work for a year to travel. I think this is it! lol. Now I wish I had paid more attention. I’ll have to check out this book.

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  4. I can’t wait to finish this book! You captured the essence really well – I do find it repetitive at times, but on the whole, it’s so much fun as well!

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  5. I just saw the book cover somewhere and thought it was lovely but didn’t know what the book was about. In fact I figured it was a novel. I was not a huge Eat, Pray, Love fan. I liked it well enough. This one sounds good despite it’s drawbacks.

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  6. I thought this looked interesting but was afraid with it being so long that it would get boring or repetitive. Sounds like it did that a little bit but but was still interesting and fun. My sister is engaged to a man in Nicaragua who has never been outside of the immediate area he lives in and she was telling me all the new experiences he’s going to have when he moves here. It definitely is crazy to realize all that we take for granted!

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  7. I read about the journey these young women took and thought it sounded fascinating. I guess it would get repetitive after a while, but I still think I’d like to read the book.

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  8. I am reading this now and really enjoying it. I am a travel addict and although I probably wouldn’t have the gumption to take off for a whole year, I can (and have) done 2-3 weeks stints to many of the places they visit on their trip.

    Great review!

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  9. Whoa, that is alot of book. But I love the idea. It takes serious cojones and disenchantment with the world to pick up and leave everything behind. I’ve had years like that, but I never would have had the guts. I could live vicariously through people like this.

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  10. I love it when books include an entertaining epilogue … when it’s well done, it gives me the closure I need in a memoir.

    I’m glad you enjoyed this one even though it’s outside your normal reading zone. Thanks for being on the tour!

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