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BIBLIOGRAPHIC DETAILS
(Print: 3/31/2020; 9780525563488; Vintage; 336 pages)
Audio: 2/2/2021; 9780593170700; Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group; Duration 10:07:34 (10 parts).
(Film: No).

SUMMARY/ EVALUATION:
I doubt that I am the first, or will be the last, person to comment on this, but an unwelcome oh-so-prominently discordant note in this book for me was Ms. Irby's excessively liberal, to the point of compulsive, habit of inserting F***, G*D* and B*tch everywhere; sluffing them off in sentences like so much dandruff. (Sorry, I think the book’s influence is still with me.)
Right now, (apparently in her previous books, her blog, and in this book) though, it is precisely that category of vocabulary that is a large part of her brand, and I suppose, what makes those to whom this book is hilarious, enjoy it so much.
She clearly has an audience, and isn’t likely to leave it, though I do find her clever enough to do so—I mean, she could write and speak interestingly without that. In fact, the book opens with an abundance of it that she couples with vivid descriptions of body functions gone awry, but the second half, that gets to the more interesting stuff about TV writing and book producing has much less of it.
That said, I almost always enjoy a biography (or autobiography): It's always interesting to learn about other people's lives, and this one is no different. I love that Sam, in her non-conformist Aquarian way, can bravely and very successfully make her way in the world despite what sounds like a hideous childhood and an abundantly (un?)fair share of trials and tribulations. She is gutsy, humble, and full on interesting, if not always useful, advice (some delivered, not as advice, but as remedies she has employed, and some delivered as anti-advice). She expresses her self-opinion as being not so bright and not so ambitious but all evidence is to the contrary.
I selected this book during my ‘Goodreads, pick-one-from-every-category nominated Best Books of 2020’ frenzy. I've had it on hold, and then kept postponing delivery for a couple of months until now. I'm pretty sure it was from the "humor" category, the one I am least likely to intentionally browse, because while I do laugh, most things that attempt to be funny, just aren't to me---so if I was supposed to laugh a lot, it’s probably not Ms. Irby's fault that I only chuckled here and there.

AUTHOR / NARRATOR Samantha Irby (2/13/1980). According to Wikipedia, Samantha “is an American comedian, author, and blogger.[1][2] She runs the blog ‘bitches gotta eat’, where she writes posts about her personal life and events.[3] Irby also co-hosted the live lit show Guts and Glory in Chicago with Keith Ecker until 2015, when the show ended its run.[4]
In 2016 FX announced that they had purchased the television rights to Irby's 2013 memoir ‘Meaty’ and her blog, with the intent to adapt them into a series.[5]”
I think only she could narrate this the way she meant it to be heard, and she does a great job.

GENRE:
Autobiography, essays, non-fiction, humor

LOCATIONS:
Chicago, IL; Kalamazoo, MI; Hollywood, CA

TIME FRAME
1980-2020

SUBJECTS:
Night clubs; Sports bars; Bowell dysfunction; Perimenopause; Menstruation; Personal fashion; Lesbians; body care; television production, poverty, home life; home care; childhood; personal finance; African American; Midwest; black authors; self-image; over-weight; daily activities; writing profession

SAMPLE QUOTATION:
From Chapter 1: “Into the Gross”
“We live up the street from a middle school, and children are already on their way home, for fuck’s sake, so I don’t feel bad having six Diet Cokes in a row. I’ll finish my water, but, like, I don’t ever want to be too hydrated. All these magazines tell you how you should really be drinking your weight in water every day, and all these movie stars would have you believe their skin glows because of that water bottle they’re carrying around, and I believe them, but also, why doesn’t anyone ever talk about how much peeing you will have to do? I no longer have a pelvic floor, Jennifer Aniston. I cannot just be gulping down Smartwater with reckless abandon!
After consuming all the liquids I’m going to for the entire day, I settle down to work, which I’m really going to do as soon as I put on a little cream highlighter and blush that no one else is ever going to see. My work: I occasionally write jokes on the Internet for free because I am the last person on Earth who still has a blog. Sometimes I have freelance projects, but there’s nothing right now. No one is going to pay me to write another book about nothing for at least the next two years. Unfortunately, I don’t have anything new or exciting to say online and absolutely zero paying scams, so my heart sinks as it dawns on me that I have gotten up and gotten dressed just to read what other people are saying on Twitter. This is the glamorous life of a writer.”

RATING:
3 stars—but, with me, that’s not that bad of a rating for a “humor” book.

STARTED-FINISHED
2/26/2021-3/3/2021
 
Signalé
TraSea | 40 autres critiques | Apr 29, 2024 |
This seems like an anti-magazine, you know. Although I am starting to like magazines, (I get the sense that she might too, maybe): like people saying ‘this is who I am when I represent beauty, when I’m at my best’, although that’s very visual. This is more like, ‘These are the problems my mind has detected with my health and beauty routine’; it’s very verbal. For someone who’s a queer Black female—a group that obvs has its own problems—I was surprised by how much this sounded like, well, there’s no one “normal norm” for everyone, but like Everygirl, you know…. When you’re religious/ascetic, you think everyone else is out drinking and dancing. I guess it’s more true that everyone is about to go drinking and dancing, but nervously wondering if they can cancel without angering their friends, and whether if they go out they’ll look like shit and get everyone insulting them and telling them that to their face, you know.

People talk about the white light, but even if you just decide to go out and you actually enjoy yourself instead of getting all up in your head and your petty thoughts—that alone, you know. That alone.

…. What’s funny is how Samantha is actually a less wounded/aggressive normie, though. I mean, you take your average person on the internet—I believe in socialism/XYZ/the internet; the purpose of XYZ is to attack people on the internet for not believing XYZ is good (or bad, in the case of the internet). And you ask the average person who’s worse, the XYZ person who’s all, XYZ! And not only that, you’re just a (label); I’m invulnerable and immortal; I’ll never die, although that’s a hellish prospect given the cruel, abusive voice in my head~ or Samantha the comedian, groaning that she had a headache because she went out drinking…. The public will be all (maybe even people who buy Samantha’s book), the immortal girl is better! She’ll never die—she must have bought a diet book! The other bitch went out drinking; she’ll bloat up!…. But I mean: a common grounding technique is to imagine yourself as a tree…. If you just keep reflecting, you’ll be like, Wow, she must really be hurting herself with that abusive voice inside her mind…. I wonder why she would choose to hurt herself with her mind…. Such an interesting question; there must be a scientific explanation ~~It’s like bro: there are NO scientific explanations, sorry to sink the fucking Bismarck on you…. 🧝‍♀️ ….

And I mean, it’s always such a bullshit discussion. Socialists don’t care about socialism or the end of fucking oppression or whatever; they care about their ego, right. The actual specific insults are such place filler bullshit; in the end they’re just saying that they don’t want to be Samantha because she’s vulnerable, you know.

…. And I’m actually surprised people don’t insult me more on the internet just because it’s the internet; it’s a comedy book; it’s like, who insulted me this time, right, although often they didn’t, right. And then they did and it’s like—irritating, although classic. And the reason they don’t respect you is ultimately because you are on the internet, lol; therefore, surely you’re the kwassik internet user…. 👌

…. I feel flattered by how much crappy white music she listens to, you know—more than me, proportionally. I mean, I understand paleface music can be good—lots of alt-y, awkward, thought-y, kinda…. Yeah. I mean, I like it…. It is funny how head-centric comedians are; they always talk about how unphysical they are. It’s funny because the physicists and the scientists and everybody—I mean, they don’t even think fucking Aquinas was brain-oriented, you know. (Hint: he was an egghead.) It’s like, If I don’t agree with you—you’re a soccer player! NOT an intellectual…. And then they’ll repost that meme like: “Religious people are inflexible in their thinking; atheists are flexible in their thinking.” It’s like, Bro—have you ever gotten sick in your life, ever needed a doctor? I guess doctors are, religious, or something…. Right?

Anyway.

…. It’s hilarious her childhood church or whatever decided to call Halloween an “autumn party”, because that’s literally what Samhain is about—it’s about the seasons. I guess the difference is that Samhain is like “thinking about how the seasons play into the meaning of life” and “autumn party” is like “lie to/distract the children—because children are scary! If they disagree, we’ll spontaneously explode/die! Scary!”

Anyway, in general, it’s funny how her take on everyday life is surprisingly (not surprisingly?) negative/disempowered, but it’s funny and fun and not negative because she just seems so unattached to everything, really.

…. Even though she’s a gay Black female and my brother is a straight white man, she kinda reminds me of my brother, because they’re both Gen X. (I used to think of my brother—1980–as an older Millennial, but now I do feel like he’s Gen X.) She’s very relatable…. Almost too relatable. I feel like everyone should have something that other people don’t; fuck all this, ‘my life is bullshit but at least I have nothing At All you can be jealous of, haha, isn’t that great!’, you know. (shrugs) But it’s her style.

But my brother probably wouldn’t see the connection because, although he doesn’t support President Voldemort crap, he probably thinks (subconsciously) that he’s a cross between Frank Capra and and like someone on a morning show with a sorta-good sense of humor, right: because he’s a Taurus, and he’s Irish, you know.

But secretly, they’re pretty similar. Chinese astrology, son: look that shit up. 😎

…. Like, I feel like half (20%) of our national conversation is, If someone is weak and evil and not perfect—sneak up behind them, and shoot them in the back; ~And the other half (80%) is, Don’t ask me to do hard shit, because it’s hard and I’m not good at things and I’m poor and I hate myself and I don’t like it….

~ (detached smoker pic)

…. I think it’s both curious (my sub word for the over-used word “interesting”, when I mean it in a positive and not an ironic way, lol) and understandable that Black people can be happy for their successful white friends, but also think that it’s racism that they’re more successful…. Although certainly Sam makes it easy for the racists in that she uses negative thinking and assumes defeat, right. Not that I don’t know what it’s like to make life easy for my enemies, right—misanthropes, I guess they would be, you know.

…. Normally when I say I won’t read an author again, it’s a euphemism for “thanks for the trauma: I found it growthful—never come to this place again”, right; but this time I mean it pretty much at face value, right—I don’t need more rice. You’d think that if I’m almost only eating eggplant, I’d need more rice than that, but I think these guys gave me like Natura Tormenta Farms’ like, entire annual eggplant harvest, basically, so I’m ok. No more rice…. Incidentally, just to be offensive: isn’t it funny how like, “Spanish” people have yellow rice, and Chinese people sometimes have brown rice? We should deploy the Constitution of America, right: save us from the confusion.

But yeah no more rice; it’s good.

(Japanese samurai on horseback) (puts helmet back on) (indistinctly) And if we meet again, it will be on the battlefield. (rides away)

…. And I know, right: comparing this book to rice—what is the anecdote about the East Asian host who asks if you want more rice before you leave, and you’re supposed to say No, ~right: it’s a bullshit offer; if you say Yes, ~he flips out on you, like, I fed you good food and you fucking want to fill up on cheap rice and shit! You’re insulting me! Fuck you! ~right—I mean, you compare the book to rice, people are just gonna come back at you like, “You just don’t like comedy, maybe”—but it’s not that; some comedy is like the opposite, almost: it can be like over-cooked pasta or something; they just think about it too much, right. They just think and think and what starts out being funny becomes like…. Was it David Sedaris who had that book, like, with the Baroque Gentleman on the cover? (looks up) Yes, but it wasn’t the first edition that was like that…. I mean, that was over-cooked pasta humor, right. Just over-worked. Maybe if I bast it with more thought-particles…. Like the object of the game is to get unfunny New York Times people who everyone respects because they don’t have the balls to hate them, right—you know, the guy who’s like, Oh, my puppet, I could never judge you: not while I feel like this…. But if somebody does some slightly unusual bad thing, so that he can’t relax, you know, not only does he go straight to The Rules, but he doesn’t even do that: he doesn’t say, Okay, the consequence of Bad Action A is Bad Consequence A: have a nice day. Like maybe that’s what the government does in written communication, right: but a quasi-bureaucrat you actually know is gonna be all like, matching the person passive aggression for passive aggression, and ~judging you~, right: and then here you are watching this guy duke it out with somebody and it’s like, Damn, that guy’s so polite…. I never knew he could fucking judge you and damn you to hell, GOD must have put him here, right!…. But, yeah: that’s the guy comedians want to have like their book, at least if it is a BOOK, right, and not a verbal routine; and some comedians almost ARE that guy, you almost can’t tell whether they Are that guy, or whether they honestly believe that they aren’t; they just happen to be One Guy who can talk, That Guy, down from the ledge, right…. Which is also what That Guy thinks about himself: he Never!, knows it’s HIM, right…. But yeah: this book is like the OPPOSITE, dog, and not in a good way: it’s like, Hahaha: I suck: I fail at everything I do and I’m still poor even though I had opportunities and I think I’m not enough and don’t like it when people disagree or aren’t like that…. And isn’t that funny? Isn’t that great?…. And it’s like, No, that’s social work shit, dog.

Because I mean: you KNOW, You Have To Know, you can’t tell me, that you don’t know, that when you’re bragging about how poor you still are and how that’s just the right way to be for you, is to limit everything about your life, starting and ending with money—I mean, that’s how it is for almost everyone, at the very least, poverty = limitation; and you KNOW the the exceptional monk/scholar/scientist who could subsist with two garments and astronaut food as long as he worked for the university—I mean, no. This bitch would be happier with money, dog, if she really thought she deserved it!!!!

And yet she’s bragging about being poor, and you know every social worker reading the book is shaking her/his head like, Damn, add to my case load, motherfucker, just so that your life can be WORSE. Mmm! (pain).

Right? You can’t tell me that’s not true, if you really know social workers who have Any fucking experience of what their field is like, you know.

…. But yeah: there are definitely some assholes of the credentialed variety that make it easy to delusion-respect them and hard to hate or move against them, that like, even Gandhi would hate, you know: he had no time for being bullied by people who thought he had no balls, who thought he didn’t have it in him to just dismiss people’s delusions that they put on you, right. He just wouldn’t literally pick up his walking stick and physically knock them off their feet with it, because he was Gandhi, not Malcolm X. But he wasn’t, I don’t know, (laughs) a collaborator, you know.

…. It’s amusing, almost when people other (verb usage) rich people, not out of some (probably poorly read: how much theory does it take to shout: $2 billion too many, jerk-off!!!!) Marxist thing/Loud Obnoxious Internet Poor Person thing, right, but just LITERALLY: like, Wow, How Can You Be Different: This Is Not Normal/This Is Not What I Do; and it’s like you wanna be that rich person so you can be like—You’re happier with your way? ~No I Hate My Life And Everything About It. ~Well, I also like this better than the other way. ~(nods) (beat) butwhywouldyoudothisthisisnotwhatIdo….

🤦‍♂️

You know: and rich people aren’t ALWAYS different: they’re not 100% the same as poor people, or they’d be poor: some people if you gave them real money would just eat lobster rolls three times a day and give expensive gifts to people in a way that would alienate that person, right: they’d piss away the money, because they don’t think they’re worth it, right: but I wouldn’t do everything that every rich person does for money, and I wouldn’t spend it like every one of them does, right: I wouldn’t get an expensive dog, for example: I would want a (NATURALLY) vegetarian pet, right: takes more guts, because those are the animals that get eaten, but like, the stereotypical rich person dog, that can’t hunt and has no agency, but still eats meat…. Like, look at the number of wolves or whatever the most numerous predator is, right: and compare it to the number of humans—we populate the earth like vegetarian animals; we should eat like vegetarian animals, and keep naturally vegetarian pets, right….

But yeah: if you actually know people that are poor, because you don’t have money, and don’t just read about them in abstract, tells-you-nothing-real-about-them, well-meaning-yet-vicious Marxist propaganda, right…. “I just can’t figure out why they wouldn’t want to be like me.” “You hate your life.” “I know…. But that’s not what I’m talking about.” “BITCH WHAT ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT YOU’RE NOT MAKING ANY SENSE.”

Sometimes you just got to call a homie a bitch, right: speak the truth, and speak it in love.

…. And it’s like: “they didn’t realize that I scammed them in petty ways.” You don’t know that. You know they didn’t call the cops—which is good, right. You don’t know that they weren’t thinking of hooking you up with a major break and then said, “I’m going to give it to a chick that doesn’t steal my pasta and crackers”, right. Like, there’s a time to break the rules: and there’s just a way to…. Spew chaos and make the world worse—mostly for yourself, right…. And does it like strike no one as weird that rich-people-are-inherently-greedy, but also…. They don’t watch all their shit compulsively and assume that everyone is always scamming them/stealing from them? That’s like…. ¿

Are people Not people because they’ve done something that, people like? 🫨

Like, feeling that way, makes it better for…. ¿

…. But yeah: it’s modestly interesting. It’s honest.

…. And yeah: I stopped ‘dating online’, because I realized, too, eventually, that people do not care to answer the prompts with actual sentences and words, and do not care if you do, right.

Maybe an astrologer/esotericist could have a chance to set people up on dates, but if you both believed in that sort of thing, you’d already both in a culture together already and you almost wouldn’t need someone to set you up, right. A website, though, it’s like: they don’t delete your profile because you haven’t logged on, for fucking years, just because you haven’t bothered, you know…. And spiritual-dating websites are even more dead than regular ones, right…. But yeah, just having a job where people actually shared some kind of culture or experience/belief sort of thing, right, would be better than the fucking…. But yeah: now I actually don’t think that we should sit down and say, And now we date! ~you know? What are we, peasants trying to keep up the fucking population, right? Look up the population of the earth over time, right; that’s not a good argument, the whole ‘duty’ thing, right….

~But yeah, like meeting someone (even meeting someone), you’d like to go with—only less superlatively positive, and less superlatively unpredictable, this book was like a sort of modestly surprising modestly good, good thing, right.

…. Although I have to say, if you’re going to make a joke that’s like a Fox tweet or whatever, don’t just put ‘JK, JK, JK’, after it, right.

The people who need to know, won’t know.

~Such is life, grasshopper, right.

…. And yeah: setting goals has been kinda one of the training-wheels aspects of my life the way it is for many people, right: and certainly you can over-plan—but I do think you can plan Some things, right. You can’t plan to “fall in love”, but you can plan going into a certain career field, even though you won’t really know what your job will be or how long that will be the right job for you. (I don’t know all the details, and obviously you want to ensure a good transition if you’re in charge of something and you leave, but I remember the cook—I’m not saying he was Rocky, but he was kinda the old tough-American-male who wanted to work the maximum number of years at the same position until he physically could not, right, as like a generational thing, almost: not that we should, like go and intentionally other people like that; but it is funny how they assume they have the answers many times, and tend not to have answers, right—yeah he was talking about the facility’s overall manager who had left, and he said, “She left because she got another job for more money”: and he didn’t quite make it sound like assault and battery, but there was definitely the implication of…. You, ~changed jobs~? For, ~money~? And not because of some improbable movie plot involving your father’s murder or some such shit? Oh man, I feel like the cartoon life decades are over…. ~Sometimes even liberals believe in the cartoon life decades delusion, right? Like that maximum-number-of-years-same-position, tough-American-slugger-no-girls-needed-on-team-USA guy made modestly more money than his modestly less fucked-up son, right—although gimme a fucking break; people still have money, for fuck’s sake—you know, and it’s like…. “No, people are poor now; the cartoon decades were taken from us by wicked capitalism….” It’s like, bro: cartoons were never real, okay. It was cake laced with sleeping agents, bro. They got recalled due to complaints, for fuck’s sake….)

But yeah, having a certain amount of tentative planned-ness, certain penciled-in goals, is I think a good thing. It’s actually kinda my goal these days—in general, I mean, this last week it’s been my goal not to call out of work, basically, since somehow I got near-sick, and also am near-behind on chores and things: like an extra ten minute walk to mail shit, that’ll just have to wait until my body says ok: maybe in a day or two, lol—but it’s my overall goal to find someone to help me form definite goals for myself, lol. (They call that looking for a career counselor. 👌)

But I would never be like—I have no goals; I fail so hard; I hate everything I do: and that’s ok!…. It’s like…. You know, she doesn’t come across as the person who’s equally contented working a dream job and getting rations in a prisoner of war camp or whatever: maybe she should have goals for her normal prosperous sort of successful life, you know: as opposed to a normie kind of…. Sad life, right.

(shrugs)
 
Signalé
goosecap | 40 autres critiques | Apr 29, 2024 |
I fuckin love Sam Irby. She's so funny and for-real that I'm always actually laughing while reading her books. I read her writing and it makes me want to be her friend. I never thought I'd enjoy so many stories about one person shitting or fucking, but here we are! Please, check out her work.
 
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MillieHennessy | 46 autres critiques | Apr 1, 2024 |
Kinda messy but I think she’d be happy about that.
 
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gonzocc | 40 autres critiques | Mar 31, 2024 |
An entertaining collection of essays covering everything from writing, dating, clubbing to general living. My favourite was the one about the importance of the 'mix tape'.
 
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SarahEBear | 40 autres critiques | Mar 22, 2024 |
Not my cup of tea. Gave up at 30% because I had my fill of secondhand embarrassment for the author, didn't like the writing style, and didn't want to hear any more about her colon.

I really don't know why I put this on my library hold list. I need to be more careful.
 
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Greenfrog342 | 40 autres critiques | Jan 22, 2024 |
Funny, nasty, relatable, too relatable, until it's deep in kink that is utterly unrelatable. First read by this author and I think she's worth more reading.
 
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KallieGrace | 8 autres critiques | Jan 18, 2024 |
Sam Irby always cracks me up and makes me think. This book is like the opposite of humble bragging. It's like brash self-deprecation.
 
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LibrarianDest | 40 autres critiques | Jan 3, 2024 |
Add this to the many funny lady memoirs/essays I've been reading lately. Much, much, much raunchier than the rest and I'm here for it.
 
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LibrarianDest | 46 autres critiques | Jan 3, 2024 |
Samantha Irby deals with heavy issues such as poverty, mental illness and disability in her own irreverent style. Her essays are wonderful. You can't read her stuff without wanting her to become your best friend. I love her honesty. She's showing the real identity lurking behind the carefully curated version of ourselves portrayed online. I don't know how she writes a raucously funny piece that turns out to be touching and deep. Bottomline, I think she's awesome because her writing makes me feel hopeful. I also recommend reading her blog Bitches Gotta Eat and her first collection of essays Meaty.
 
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imjustmea | 46 autres critiques | Dec 23, 2023 |
Raw and hilarious. And not for those with overly delicate sensibilities.
 
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decaturmamaof2 | 18 autres critiques | Nov 22, 2023 |
I am surprised at how much I really like this book, considering how much I don't actually essay collections. Irby is incredibly funny and witty in her descriptions, I really love that she can find humor in everything even in the most depressing of situations. Despite these comedic writings she still does not discount the severity of these events in her life, still giving levity to each situation. Since I am close to Irby's age I knew all of her pop culture references and was incredibly happy when she talked about older songs I knew as well as technology, most books I've read lately have references to modern pop culture so it was refreshing.

Irby's observations were candid and honest venturing into topics such as sex, dieting, and flatulence. Honesty is so refreshing, with all the YA I've been sick of and science books reading was so much fun. Considering that Irby is a blogger I think I'll check out her blog 'Bitches Gotta Eat" and I hope it is just as funny and honest as this book was.
 
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latteslipsticklit | 46 autres critiques | Nov 16, 2023 |
Funny enough to keep me reading and giggling through an exhausted evening! Samantha Irby’s early life sounds horrendous but she has survived and taken it all- even learning how to live with children! And a possessed cat...
So honest and frank(ly rude). Loved it. One day I hope to write essays somewhat like this!
Highly recommended.
 
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Dabble58 | 46 autres critiques | Nov 11, 2023 |
Oh, this woman. she has my heart. I wonder if I feel like I relate so much just because I grew up in a weird situation (or at least near in some cases) like she did. Maybe it was some of the Illinois. And, the wit. Oh, love her.
 
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ankhamun | 46 autres critiques | Nov 2, 2023 |
(52) Not my thing. A collection of umm .. I guess essays is a kind term. Really just self-indulgent riffs on whatever happens to roll through the author's mind. Like expounding on sex in the city episodes, tips for being a good party guest, ways to talk to teenagers, taking a dump in public - you get the drift. Inane, repetitive, self-deprecating, juvenile - occasionally funny, but mostly cringe-worthy. Meaning I cringe for the author who puts herself out there. I mean all the way out there.

I would hope she actually does more than lounge around watching Netflix and eating snack food all day. She writes about her slovenly life for which she seems alternatively horrified of and equally ready to defend and show-off. I guess there is only so many times you can be reminded that a person is low-class before you devalue what they are saying and feel disgust for them. While I love sharp and honest humor, I require more subtlety to truly be amused.

I had to push myself to finish though did occasionally laugh. I would definitely not read her other books despite our similarities in age. Too crude and pathetic for me. I purposely read to escape the banal musings of everyday drudgery, not to roll around in them.½
1 voter
Signalé
jhowell | 8 autres critiques | Oct 19, 2023 |
Wow, no thank you is right… I don’t know if I shouldn’t have started with this book of hers, if the audiobook format was a bad idea, or if I am just about to turn 40 and therefore am an old fuddyduddy, but do you know how many times I yelled “MAKE BETTER CHOICES, Samantha Irby” while listening to this? If she said “Sex is great but…” or “Hello 911…” one more time I think I may have given up on the book entirely. Also, who thinks it is too difficult to wash their belly button? Like, why do 5 second personal hygiene things seem so hard to her? Wash yourself, it’s really easy. And why is she broke but going out with “friends” who will put expensive drinks on her tab? Those are terrible friends, find better friends, do people actually like people that would do that? Why does she think people are impressed by what face cream you have on your nightstand? I do not know the names of any of those face cream brands and no one I know would either. She seems to both not care about anything and also care about everyone and thinks everyone is judging everything, which most people are not and don’t care at all. I am just baffled by her choices… but I mean I guess she is doing something right because she has many books and has worked on several shows. So most likely, this is the book for someone else, not for me. You may love it. I did not.
 
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Monkeypats | 40 autres critiques | Sep 19, 2023 |
Samantha Irby talks about a lot of embarassing stuff, but once I got over being a bit shocked I found that I identified with her a lot. That's what makes her so funny, she brings up stuff you don't want to think about, and the shock is refreshing.
 
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annbury | 8 autres critiques | Sep 16, 2023 |
Love, love, loved it. Laughed more at the first book I read from Samantha ('Meaty'). I mean, I laughed a lot with this one too but it also had more relatable moments like:
'I'm not even sure I had a personality back then; I just tried to haphazardly arrange other people's projections and shit I thought was cool into something captivating.'
Definitely recommend. Next step: I gotta go buy her third book :)
 
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typefetishist | 46 autres critiques | Sep 16, 2023 |
Absolutely hi-la-rious! Randomly bought it while in London for a couple of days, and was awkwardly trying not to gigglesnort while on the subway
 
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typefetishist | 18 autres critiques | Sep 16, 2023 |
This collection of essays took me to a lot of places. Laughter, anxiety, nausea, surprise, joy, tears, and mostly a deep respect for the straight up honesty. And Helen Keller just rocked.
 
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Andy5185 | 46 autres critiques | Jul 9, 2023 |
Samantha Irby is entertaining but bugs me after a while. I enjoyed her previous book much more. She does make me laugh.
 
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Andy5185 | 40 autres critiques | Jul 9, 2023 |
Not my favorite of hers, and I've read all 4.

I don't listen to the Dave Matthews Band, so that chapter was a bust.

I' m not a fan of Sex and the City, so that chapter was also a bust. But I'm happy for Samantha that she is a writer on that show.

A little bit more poop stories than I was comfortable with, but that's on me.

I will still read anything she writes, because she is hilarious.
 
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MarigoldJackiFitz | 8 autres critiques | Jul 6, 2023 |
audiobook (9.5hrs, read by the author) - some essays are funnier than others, but you can always skip ahead if you don't need to know all of the many dozens of episodes of all the seasons of Sex and the City that could be changed for better/worse. I find the author's extreme candor refreshing and have enjoyed her other books as well, but if you are at ALL offended by toilet matters, you probably wouldn't care for this author with Crohn's syndrome diarrhea and perimenopausal incontinence.½
 
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reader1009 | 8 autres critiques | Jul 3, 2023 |
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