by Gina Barreca (Author)
In a world where eye cream is made from placenta, Gina Barreca is the lone voice calling out 'But wait, whose placenta is it'? In this collection of deliciously quotable essays, Gina asks the big questions: Why is there no King Charming? Why does no bra ever fit? Why do people say 'cougar' like it's a bad thing? Why do we call it a glass ceiling when it's just a thick layer of men? Barreca packs a hilarious punch while gleefully rejecting emotional torture, embracing limitless laughter, and showing women how they can conquer the world with good friends ('It's not that diamonds are a girl's best friend, but a girl's best friends are diamonds'), sharp wit, great shoes, and not a single worry about visible panty lines.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 240
Edition: 1
Publisher: Griffin,U.S.
Published: 01 Jul 2010
ISBN 10: 0312547277
ISBN 13: 9780312547271
Gina Barreca is very, very funny. For a woman. --Dave Barry
From spotting chin hairs in a rear-view mirror to finding a bra that never fits, the book is 120-mph humor! --Cindy Adams, The New York Post
These eminently readable pieces will have people laughing out loud, then sighing thoughtfully. Many readers, especially women, will enjoy, discuss, and reread this quick, breezy work of commentary, a book that stirs up dust long after its covers are closed. -- Booklist
Barreca is probably the funniest woman writing in America. She does what all great comedians do, latches onto the absurd, looks at it from a number of equally absurd angles and is pretty fearless at making fun of anything, including herself. --Rita Ciresi, award-winning author of Mother Rocket and Pink Slip
Fans of Nora Ephron's I Feel Bad About My Neck: And Other Thoughts on Being a Woman will find humor along with serious insights about women and aging...Between the snappy observations, Barreca takes an opportunity to liken the progression of contemporary feminist thought to a car accident--it's not so much that we're in a backlash as we're in a whiplash. -- Publishers Weekly
Barreca... is a brilliant and witty writer. -- Psychology Today
University of Connecticut English Professor Barreca offers feminism for the everywoman in these humorous essays. Expect poignant insights tucked between the laugh lines. --Ms. Magazine
Some people are funny in an acid-edged cocktail lounge, like Dorothy Parker, in a smoky French cafe, like David Sedaris, or in a crazy English country house, like P.G. Wodehouse. Gina is funny in your kitchen, in the ladies' room of your favorite restaurant, in the awful dressing room with forty-seven ugly bathing suits around you. Gina Barreca is funny, for real. --Amy Bloom
This thought-provoking book entertains while it educates and enlightens. Wise women will get what she writes about; wise men would do well to read it, too. -- Hartford Courant
Regina Barreca's prose, in equal measures, is hilarious and humane. Her no-holds-barred observations make me laugh, tear up a little, and nod my head in recognition. A witty paisana, Barreca packs a punch and lays bare our foibles. --Wally Lamb
Gina Barreca is very, very funny. For a woman. Dave Barry
From spotting chin hairs in a rear-view mirror to finding a bra that never fits, the book is 120-mph humor! Cindy Adams, The New York Post
These eminently readable pieces will have people laughing out loud, then sighing thoughtfully. Many readers, especially women, will enjoy, discuss, and reread this quick, breezy work of commentary, a book that stirs up dust long after its covers are closed. Booklist
Barreca is probably the funniest woman writing in America. She does what all great comedians do, latches onto the absurd, looks at it from a number of equally absurd angles and is pretty fearless at making fun of anything, including herself. Rita Ciresi, award-winning author of Mother Rocket and Pink Slip
Fans of Nora Ephron's I Feel Bad About My Neck: And Other Thoughts on Being a Woman will find humor along with serious insights about women and aging...Between the snappy observations, Barreca takes an opportunity to liken the progression of contemporary feminist thought to a car accident--it's not so much that we're in a backlash as we're in a whiplash. Publishers Weekly
Barreca is a brilliant and witty writer. Psychology Today
University of Connecticut English Professor Barreca offers feminism for the everywoman in these humorous essays. Expect poignant insights tucked between the laugh lines. Ms. Magazine
Some people are funny in an acid-edged cocktail lounge, like Dorothy Parker, in a smoky French cafe, like David Sedaris, or in a crazy English country house, like P.G. Wodehouse. Gina is funny in your kitchen, in the ladies' room of your favorite restaurant, in the awful dressing room with forty-seven ugly bathing suits around you. Gina Barreca is funny, for real. Amy Bloom
This thought-provoking book entertains while it educates and enlightens. Wise women will get what she writes about; wise men would do well to read it, too. Hartford Courant
Regina Barreca's prose, in equal measures, is hilarious and humane. Her no-holds-barred observations make me laugh, tear up a little, and nod my head in recognition. A witty paisana, Barreca packs a punch and lays bare our foibles. Wally Lamb
Gina Barreca is very, very funny. For a woman. --Dave Barry
From spotting chin hairs in a rear-view mirror to finding a bra that never fits, the book is 120-mph humor! --Cindy Adams, The New York Post
These eminently readable pieces will have people laughing out loud, then sighing thoughtfully. Many readers, especially women, will enjoy, discuss, and reread this quick, breezy work of commentary, a book that stirs up dust long after its covers are closed. --Booklist
Barreca is probably the funniest woman writing in America. She does what all great comedians do, latches onto the absurd, looks at it from a number of equally absurd angles and is pretty fearless at making fun of anything, including herself. --Rita Ciresi, award-winning author of Mother Rocket and Pink Slip
Fans of Nora Ephron's I Feel Bad About My Neck: And Other Thoughts on Being a Woman will find humor along with serious insights about women and aging...Between the snappy observations, Barreca takes an opportunity to liken the progression of contemporary feminist thought to a car accident--it's not so much that we're in a backlash as we're in a whiplash. --Publishers Weekly
Barreca... is a brilliant and witty writer. --Psychology Today
University of Connecticut English Professor Barreca offers feminism for the everywoman in these humorous essays. Expect poignant insights tucked between the laugh lines. --Ms. Magazine
Some people are funny in an acid-edged cocktail lounge, like Dorothy Parker, in a smoky French cafe, like David Sedaris, or in a crazy English country house, like P.G. Wodehouse. Gina is funny in your kitchen, in the ladies' room of your favorite restaurant, in the awful dressing room with forty-seven ugly bathing suits around you. Gina Barreca is funny, for real. --Amy Bloom
This thought-provoking book entertains while it educates and enlightens. Wise women will get what she writes about; wise men would do well to read it, too. --Hartford Courant
Regina Barreca's prose, in equal measures, is hilarious and humane. Her no-holds-barred observations make me laugh, tear up a little, and nod my head in recognition. A witty paisana, Barreca packs a punch and lays bare our foibles. --Wally Lamb
GINA BARRECA, Professor at UConn, wrote Babes in Boyland, They Used to Call Me Snow White but I Drifted and co-authored I'm With Stupid: One Man, One Woman, and 10,000 Years of Misunderstandings Between The Sexes Cleared Right Up with Pulitzer Prize winner Gene Weingarten. She grew up in Brooklyn, NY but now lives in Storrs, CT. Go figure.