I love Chelsea's podcast, and I really enjoyed her book. I could have read it in one sitting, but I wanted to take my time with it. Her stories are both shocking and incredibly relatable. Not a linear memoir, she jumps from a childhood in the southwest to college in New York to performing comedy in Chicago. Chapters are named for important women in her life, it's so fun to read a memoir from a true girl's girl. The theme of overcoming adversity with glamour, style, and sheer will had me cheering and crying the whole time. The most striking and powerful piece was the redacted bits. It was chilling to see how much women's stories are silenced and censored. I'm so grateful she chose to include the black bars.
Parts of this were really interesting, but I don't love historical fiction and reading this was starting to become a chore. Just a little slow-paced for me.
Sobbed through the last 50 pages. So sweet and thoughtful, Ann Patchett really is such a queen. Listening to Meryl Streep do the audio was such a treat, but if I’m honest, her cadence got stale about 3/4 through and I switched to the text.
I loved it! When Christina Lauren hit, they really hit. The characters were smart, fun, and likeable, and they made good, logical choices (no misunderstanding tropes here). The audiobook with dual narration was great.
It was nice to check in with Gypsy-Rose as she prepared for her release from prison. It’s great to see how much she took upon herself to learn and how reflective she’s become. Since she only recently got any real education, I won’t be too hard on the writing quality. However, the format was tough to read. I didn’t need the prison phone “this is a call from an inmate…” nearly every page, although I get what they were trying to reinforce there. The interview style also made the book feel stilted. It maybe should have been a podcast.
I love Danny's podcast, and I loved his first book as well. These were funny, heartwarming, nostalgic, and sometimes tearful stories (some true, some less true) about the holidays. I'll go back to this year after year. I recommend the audiobook read by the author.
Part biography, part tribute, part poetry reading, this felt like a long podcast, in a good way. The audio design was very well done, with subtle sound effects like crickets or waves. I thought it did a good job of honoring Mary Oliver while being real about who she was as a person. Carmen Maria Machado tells a story that absolutely gutted me. I would listen to this if I couldn’t sleep because it’s so gentle and evocative.
I read this for my work’s DEI initiative and really enjoyed it. I wasn’t familiar with Alicia Roth Weigel’s work before reading. She’s certainly lived a very interesting life, as a world traveler, activist, and political campaign manager who didn’t realize her androgen insensitivity syndrome meant she was intersex until she was 19. I learned I didn’t know much about the intersex community before reading and appreciated her insight, even if she did paint some things with a broad brush.