Pregnant at seventeen and forced into a prison-like home for unwed mothers. Liz Pryor speaks out in her memoir -Look at You Now, “I see it as a book of transformational coming of age… A girl who comes into knowing herself, and the world, in a completely different way then when she arrived…They basically fundamentally changed the way I see the world.

The only thing that really matters is that you, inside yourself, can get behind yourself, forgive yourself, accept yourself, and move on.


“I can no longer stay quiet in this world, I have a voice and I feel it reverberate off my internal walls, making its slow climb upward until its melody can be heard all around.”

Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: RSS
Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!