Square Hole for a Square Peg by Author Exona Moll takes the reader through events, experiences, and lessons learned in the writer’s life. The book reflects on her upbringing during the end of the Second World War, a sobering if not always enthralling, her bouts of depression, motherhood, her boating adventure that becomes her healthy response to a loss along with God’s intervention, and through her retirement stage.
She narrates her childhood tales with zest, it is funny and engaging while her grief makes you hold her hand, hugging her while seeking a future filled with hope and promise. The book is a quick read but it is a story of empowerment and finding one’s self. For Moll, describing her journey in her boat living allows the readers to want to change their lives, to do things differently and create a positive change in life. And to desire change, you are going to have to step out of your comfort zone. Allowing God to intervene with her hesitating made everything lighter and a bit easier for her to recoup from the tragedies she faced.
Square Hole for a Square Peg is a short and interesting book that talks about life struggles, wins, and challenges the author has gone through in her life. Exona Moll is an outstanding writer with excellent storytelling skills.
To transform your life, Like Moll, you will experience discomfort and pain. Change can be a painful process, but the rewards of going through the change are priceless. This book will fuel your enthusiasm to give things a go. It will show you how to sort out the self-limiting beliefs that stop you from stepping up and taking on the challenge of change.
Available in all major online book stores! Paperback: https://amzn.to/3IS5HgD
About the Author
I was born in Oxford during the Second World War. We lived in a suburb of Oxford where there were all large houses and mostly elderly folks. We lived in a flat that was upstairs in my grandmother’s house. Grandma was an invalid, and I was not to disturb her. I started school at the local infants’ school, but I was always sick. So my parents sent me as a day girl to a nearby boarding school. It was a good start for me; I learned all about good speech, good grammar, and the importance of keeping one’s arms in at mealtimes, etc. But we day girls were always outsiders.
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