![]() ![]() ![]() If you're from Chicago (as I am), you may also be delighted (as I was) to discover that your local Planned Parenthood was once shared by Tina Fey. ![]() The author did a great job of touching on important issues (like female perception in comedy) without succumbing to the "PC-ness" some fall prey to when publishing their words for all to see. At no point was I bored of reading about her children or unimpressed by champagne problems (both of which I experienced while reading Fey's good friend Amy Poehler's memoir, Yes, Please). Her memoir effectively spotlights the sarcastic, over the top humor so laboriously cultivated throughout her career in comedy. And so, from the organization of these happy events, the reading saga began.Īs for Tina. Thankfully, I never read it when it came out 5 years ago. ![]() Brown and Company, 2011) happens to be one of the two English books in my Italian host family's home. In this case, the reason is simply that I am as impatient as a cabbie in traffic when it comes to reading my Kindle in the sun and Bossypants (Reagan Arthur Books / Little. BUT, allow me to justify with the popular cliche, "everything happens for a reason". Let me just start by saying, yes, I am incredibly-perhaps even comically-late to the Tina Fey memoir party. Tina Fey on comedy, family, society, and everything in between. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |