If Macaroni Could Talk

A lovely new book to read to your young one . . . that’s simple enough for them to read themselves.

I’m so, so happy to introduce one of my latest editing projects, If Macaroni Could Talk by Antonique Spence, which I love for so many reasons!

It’s targeted at young children, maybe four to eight, and deals with bullying in a compassionate way. It’s about the power every child has to spread love and make the world better in their own little way.

The main character, Loui, is also brown, which isn’t intrinsic to the story but I think it’s a great idea for kids of any colour to see themselves in the books they read. Here is the Amazon blurb. Please check it out for a kid you love.

As an adventurous, clever, and imaginative young girl, Loui discovers the power of her words, actions, and dreams with the help of her Grandma Carrie. Her favorite food, Grandma’s Amazing Macaroni and Cheese, quickly becomes the face of world change. The gooey, cheesy, buttery essence of Grandma’s famous recipe inspires Loui’s world, which leads her to impact others by spreading positivity to everyone, one talking note at a time.

(Side note, the author and I clicked because my grandmother’s name is Grandma Carrie too!)

Have you bought it? Do you have any comments? Let me know in the comments!

Maysoon Zayid Found Her Dream

We dream or we die.

Cover of Maysoon Zayid's book, Find Another Dream

Maysoon Zayid likes to joke that her situation makes other people feel better about their lives. After all, she’s a brown-skinned, female, Muslim Palestinian with cerebral palsy. “If that doesn’t make you feel better about yourself,” she jokes, “Something’s really wrong with you!”

Yup. She’s got it coming at her from all sides. As she explained in her Audible memoir, Find Another Dream, she was robbed of oxygen by the drunken sot of a doctor who delivered her. She twitches incessantly, something she says is exhausting, and I believe her. She wasn’t supposed to be able to walk, but her father taught her how, by placing her feet upon his and walking her around the room, the way my father danced with me.

She got speech therapy to be clearly understood, and dance lessons instead of physio, which her parents couldn’t afford. And yet, when she announced in dance class that she wanted to dance professionally, her instructor patronisingly sneered, “Find another dream.”

Yeah, about that . . . . Not only has she danced and acted on Broadway, but she travels all over the world doing stand-up, appeared with Adam Sandler in Don’t Mess with the Zohan, and has a recurring role on General Hospital. And her TED Talk has, like, a hundred trillion views. You can check it out here.

Though American born, she travels to Palestine regularly, to act as an advocate for those who are suffering, especially the children. She’s somehow become the poster girl for many causes: women, brown people, Arabs, and the disabled, and manages to fill all those roles with great humour.

She has her own stuff going on on YouTube, too, like her video series, Advice You Don’t Want to Hear, and is a regular on celebrity talk shows and stand-up stages around the world. The book is short, but such fun that I went running to see what else she had out there.

You just got yourself a fan, girl!  

Read it? Or are you reading something else you’d like to recommend. Tell us!

Amy Schumer’s Lower Back Tattoo

A little funny, a little crass, a little thoughtful.

Photo of the cover of Amy Schumer's book.

To be honest upfront, I’m on the fence about Amy Schumer; I think she’s funny enough, and I’ve enjoyed her movies and standup, but I wouldn’t list her among my favourites. It’s straight-up take her or leave her, as far as I’m concerned.

But I love memoirs, and I loved The Girl with the Lower Back Tattoo, too. I didn’t feel like she was trying too hard to be funny, and her tendency to deliberately go for the easy, gross-out gag wasn’t as evident. As I listened, (yeah, I love me my Audible), I realised that I’d been guilty of assuming that just because she played dumb or ditzy characters, she was that way herself. I was actually surprised, I’m ashamed to say, at how clever she was; smart and incisive.

I enjoyed her adventures and her self-confidence, especially in a profession where you’re expected to be almost suicidally skinny. Hooray for the chunky girls! And she takes her little run-ins with social awkwardness and embarrassment in stride.

Reviews have been mixed, as are the reviews of her performances, but I enjoyed it, and will probably listen again.

Pairings

I think I’ll pair this enjoyable memoir with these lovely temporary tattoos, because you don’t need to bleed to have a tramp stamp.

And, maybe, a copy of Mother-Daughter Duet: Getting to the Relationship You Want with Your Adult Daughter, because she and her mom have lots of fences to mend.

Interested in writing your own memoir? I can help. Contact me here.

Have you read The Girl with the Lower Back Tattoo? Are you a fan? Comment here!

Is Alan Cumming His Father’s Son?

And incidentally, if you haven’t seen him in Titus, FIND IT AND WATCH IT!

Alan Cumming's Not My Father's Son

Probably the first time I encountered Alan Cumming was in Circle of Friends. I was immediately captivated by his snarky, rat-faced character; his job was to make your skin crawl, and that he did very well.

I think I saw him next in the bizarrely anachronistic rendition of Shakespeare’s Titus, along with Anthony Hopkins. Once again, Alan stole the show. And my heart. He’s pretty high on my list of celebrities I’d most like to have dinner with. Or anything else for that matter.

So you can imagine how I felt about his memoir, Not My Father’s Son. Alan Cumming, reading to me about his fabulous and exciting life! What could be better?

Well, let me tell you, if you’re looking for butterflies and light, you chose the wrong book, my brother. Alan’s young life was horrifying, veering between poverty, cold, and nightmarish abuse from a brutish father who reminded me of old man Morel in D. H. Lawrence’s Sons and Lovers. I mean, he almost scalped him, for God’s sake.

It’s an old trope that out of immense childhood pain arise the most creative and artistic impulses. But damn. How do some people survive such experiences, not only with their sanity intact, but with enough drive and ambition to make something of themselves?

Of course, one of the best parts of the book (apart from getting the scoop on all his fascinating theatrical projects and his romantic adventures as a bisexual man) was the mystery surrounding his paternity. Apparently, his mother had an affair, and there was a high chance that Alan was not, in fact, the son of the monster who terrorised him most of his life. The suspense will make you chew on your cuticles as you wait for the DNA test, his mother’s confession, and all the drama. Was he his father’s son? Get the book, cause I’m not gonna tell ya.

What I can tell you is, if you’re a fan of Alan’s, you’d be doing yourself a disservice by not getting this book. It’s a masterpiece.

That’s my two cents. What’s yours? Please leave a comment.

Yes, Please, Amy!

Girl crushin’

Y’all know I’m a sucker for a good memoir, and Amy Poehler’s Yes, Please is definitely one of those.

I first spotted Amy on Upright Citizen’s Brigade, when I was repeatedly drawn to this strange, big-eyed blonde who just radiated good-natured weirdness. When she moved to SNL I started girl-crushing, and by Parks and Recreations I was besotted. She’s super smart, and so funny. When I got my hands on the Audible version of her book I was excited, because I knew the book was going to be good. AND she was going to read it to me. (I’m so spoiled.)

It always makes me feel good to hear of celebrities who had happy, stable childhoods and grew up to become normal, productive people, rather than the endless drama, dysfunction and anguish that you always imagine fuels a creative career.

I enjoyed listening to her journey, and her early experiences in comedy. I enjoyed her anecdotes about behind the scenes at SNL. And I fell in love with her husband, Will Arnett, all over again. He’s one of my favourite comedians, and I was so chuffed when they were married. They seemed perfect together. It broke my heart when they divorced. But she was so classy and diplomatic. I have ‘nuff respect for her for not dragging his name in the muck.

The cherry on top is, she also wins the award for best chapter title of all time: “Humping Justin Timberlake”. I could never have come up with anything that fabulous.  

Good job, Amy. I’m waiting for you to write again!

Pairings

Yes, Please is paired with The Best of The Carol Burnett Show By TimeLife: 33 Episodes on 11 DVD Collection, because Amy’s such a fan of Carol’s she managed to persuade her to speak on the book. And who doesn’t adore Carol Burnett?

And An Introductory Guide to Magic Mushrooms: The Beginners Psychedelic Explorer’s Guide of This Hallucinogenic Plant, i.e., a guide to tripping on mushrooms. Because, well . . . read the book.

Join the conversation. Please leave a comment.


Vampire-mageddon Approaches

Fat Vampire 3: All You Can Eat by Johnny B. Truant

This third installment in the Fat Vampire series features one of the best opening lines I have ever read, in any book, anywhere: “Reginald was getting tired of bumping into strippers”.

I mean, how great is that? It raises so many questions. Why were the strippers there? Why was he bumping into them? And why was he tired of it? You know you just have to read more.

By this point in the series, things are starting to get dark. There’s a war brewing between vampires and humans, instigated and incited by angels who certainly aren’t the kinds of beings you and I imagine when you hear the word.

Vampire-mageddon is on the horizon, and the entire bloodsucking species is facing extinction. Can the smartest vamp on the planet think his species out of this one?

Again, loved it. And the books are short, so they’re perfect for a couple of nights snuggled up under your blankie.

Pairing

 Fat Vampire 3: All You Can Eat goes perfectly with this elegant stainless steel Atlin coffee mug, because Reginald is still too much of a coward to feed off his prey, and sips it from cups instead. This will keep it nice and warm until he’s ready for it.

And this Asense Home Collection Sunburst Mirror. Because that would be a hilarious trick to play on a vampire . . ..

Read it yet? Want to? Let’s talk.

Neil Patrick Harris Read to Me

And he crushed it.

Cover image of Neil Patrick Harris, memoir, showing him dressed as a magician, holding a top hat.

I know that once I make my confession things are gonna get ugly in here, so I’m just gonna come right out and say it. I’ve never seen a single episode of Doogie Howser, M.D., and deeply disliked How I Met Your Mother. The first, because it simply wasn’t on TV in Trinidad at the time, and the second because the show never grabbed me, and I found the laugh track annoying.

So there.

HOWEVER—and it’s a big however—I adore Neil Patrick Harris. Men with three first names are so sexy. I loved his memoir, Neil Patrick Harris: Choose Your Own Autobiography, especially since I got the audiobook and Neil read the whole thing to me. I’m lazy, I know.

I love the memoir genre, especially if I like and respect the person who wrote it, but this one was different. Special. Neil chose to organise it like one of those old-fashioned Choose Your Own Adventure books I couldn’t get enough of as a child. The kind that had you hopping back and forth from page to page to see what happened next, depending on choices you make.

Pretty damn hard to achieve with a memoir, no? Double the difficulty because it’s written in the second person: You.

Anyway, Neil nailed it. He has a wonderful voice, and he’s led a happy and interesting life. I’ve always had the theory that some of the most successful and creative people have lived through a hard, painful life. Neil kicks that theory into a cocked hat. He was loved, cherished, and encouraged by his family. He lived the dream.

We get to hear about his early adventures in theatre, his big breaks on his own TV series, and how the stole the show from everyone else on HIMYM. How he fell in love and came out as a gay man (or was it the other way around? I don’t remember.) How he became daddy to two beautiful children (that part was super interesting).

And he’s friends with Elton John!!!! Squeal!

Loved it. Good job, Neil.

Pairing

I’m gonna pair Neil Patrick Harris: Choose Your Own Autobiography with The Magic Misfits, because I bloody well didn’t know he’d written other books.

As well as the DVD trio of Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle / Harold and Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay / A Very Harold & Kumar Christmas because as much as I adore John Cho and Kal Penn, NPH steals the show. Spoiler: he’s high and super horny and he humps everything.

Get it, and enjoy some of the best slacker comedy out there.

(Please note that as an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.)

Have you read the book? Seen any of the movies? Comment here.

Interested in writing your own memoir? I can help. Contact me here.

True Porn Clerk Stories

There are more careers in porn than the obvious

I grew up in a country so straight-laced that in the 90s a store owner was charged for selling—I kid you not—a pubic comb, a “male enhancer”, and a pair of men’s underwear imprinted with I Ate the Whole Thing.

In my family, we never had a VCR, cable hadn’t made it to our shores yet, and the Internet was 20 years into the future. In other words, my teenage exposure to porn was distressingly limited to clandestine gawping at 5-minute clips at friends’ houses. I was college-age the first time I saw an entire porn reel from start to finish. I was the only girl there, uncomfortably wedged in on the couch among four or five teenage boys at a friend’s house in Jamaica, when the ‘rents were out. I don’t remember much of the film, but I remember the experience as a landmark.

At 21, post-degree, I gaped around myself in Soho, London, at the neon XXXs flashing in dusty shop windows, with aging bleached-blondes in tatty bustiers standing outside doorways, puffing on fags and catcalling passing men, daring them to enter. In Brussels I worked up the courage to walk into a crack-in-the-wall porn theatre, stupidly stopping at the concessions stand to buy a tuna sandwich and a drink. Too dumb to know that one did not eat in porn theatres.

I lasted five minutes, maybe ten, before I raced outside, never mind the francs I’d wasted, to finish my tuna sandwich in the street. Because a sharply dressed young businessman in a neat grey suit had sat himself a few seats down from me and begun to do what most people do in porn theatres.

In Geneva, my sister, her boyfriend and I ventured unto one of those noble establishments where they sold handcuffs, ball gags, floppy pink dildos and lurid video cassettes out front. To the back, you could rent a private booth for five or ten minutes and “view” the cassette of your choice. There was nothing behind each curtain but a wooden bench, a box of tissues, and a half-full wastebasket. After soaking up the atmosphere and the naughtiness of it all, we left, laughing.

Yeah, so that was my brief introduction to the seamy underside of the porn world. Lame, I know.

Anyhoo, on to True Porn Clerk Stories, a memoir written and narrated by Ali Davis. In short bursts of maybe five minutes each, Ali reminisces about her adventures, paying her way through college by manning the desk in a video store (remember those?) whose downstairs adults-only room was quite popular with the punters.

She relates her stories in a dry, jaded, I’ve-seen-everything voice, and they’ll make you reach for the hand sanitiser. Punters so desperate for their porn fix that they waited outside in the cold for her to come unlock early in the morning. Customers who don’t rewind their tapes are bad enough, but those who return them wet and sticky? Ugh. Racist covers with black men depicted as farm animals. Entire series of videos depicting acts that are still illegal in many territories. Men who try to pick her up, or worse, don’t seem aware that the downstairs room is equipped with CC cameras, and decide to “enjoy the product” on the spot.

Ick, ick, and ick. But so, so funny. You’ll cringe, you’ll empathise, and you’ll certainly laugh.

Pairing

For the punters, I’m gonna pair True Porn Clerk Stories with a classic men’s mackintosh from Adam Baker, because no pervert should venture into a porn store without them.

For you, the listener, I recommend this Earworks ear wash kit, to cleanse and irrigate. Because when you’re done listening, you’re gonna feel like you need it.

(Please note that as an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.)

Interested in writing your own memoir? I can help. Contact me here.

Excited to hear your point of view. Please leave a comment below.

What It’s Like to Be Born a Crime

Get the book! Seriously! Get it!

Trevor Noah's Born a Crime cover. And he is cute!
Be still, my heart . . .

I’ll admit it freely: I’m a Trevor Noah junkie. I watch him obsessively, pretty much the same way I watched John Stewart when he was at the helm of The Daily Show. They’re both so smart, funny, compassionate, incisive and hella cute.

So when I discovered that Trevor had published his autobiography, Born a Crime : Stories from a South African Childhood, I downloaded it so fast I bruised my clicky finger. Happily, I got the Audible version, so not only did I get to enjoy one of the best memoirs I have ever “read”, but I also got to hear my heart-throb Trevor read it to me! Win-win!

I’d be hard-pressed to describe how freaking good this book is. How richly textured and eloquent and evocative and heart-stopping. I’d read books set in South Africa’s apartheid era before, such as Life, and Times of Michael K by J. M. Coetzee, or The Grass is Singing, by Doris Lessing. Both are brilliant.

But maybe it’s because of my West Indian heritage that shares so much with his African one. Maybe it’s because Trevor is so young, so much closer to my era, that I was able to identify. With Trevor’s deeply religious but surprisingly feisty and defiant mother. With his stalwart grandmother, who wasn’t afraid to put a licking on any kid that gave her lip—except for Trevor, who was “so white” she was afraid he’d bruise.

I loved the family relationships, especially with his brother. I marvelled at the way his father was willing to conceive a baby in a relationship that could literally land him in jail. I recoiled at his stepfather’s brutality, and shifted uncomfortably at the descriptions of poverty and lack.

When I look at Trevor Noah now, on top of his game, ruling the world, I feel proud and relieved. Because to hear him tell it, his sketchy youth might have led him down an entirely different path, as it did so many of his peers.

Quite literally one of the best books I have ever read.

Pairing

I’d like to pair Born a Crime with The Eat-a-Bug Cookbook, Revised: 40 Ways to Cook Crickets, Grasshoppers, Ants, Water Bugs, Spiders, Centipedes, and Their Kin (which seriously exists) in honour of the years in which Trevor and his family had to survive on mopane worms and the like. Ugh.

Also, with this AlbergBest 21 megapixel camera, in recognition of Trevor’s brief life of crime, and the stolen camera, full of some other family’s vacation photos, which finally made him realise that his trade in stolen merchandise was hurting innocent strangers. Maybe it’s what helped turn his life around . . . if so, I’m grateful.

(Please note that as an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.)

Is there any memoir you love more? Or are you a Trevor Noah fan like me? I’d love to hear from you.

Interested in writing your own memoir? I can help. Contact me here.

Messing With Space and Time

I wish I could slip through a crack in time, too.

Wally Roux, Quantum Mechanic

Written by Nick Carr, performed by William Jackson Harper

All I can say is . . . awwwww. I fell in love with this young man from the opening lines. He was so sweet, so smart, so self-assured and so gauche at the same time. He reminded me of my son. I just wanted to bake him cookies and give him a hug.

Wally is a young man who moves to Savannah, Georgia with his adoptive mother, only to discover that a quantum vandal has been messing with the fabric of time, space, and whatever else. Chaos theory, string theory, who knows? I’m not a quantum genius like he is.

But instead of freaking out, he decides to rip a hole in the fabric of time/space, crawl in and fix the problem. In doing so, he discovers more about himself and who he is in the world . . .  and all the other infinite worlds out there. So sad this Audible recording is only about two hours long. I was begging for more.

Wally left me with an ache in my heart than only a sequel can fill.

Pairing

Today I’m going to team up Wally Roux, Quantum Mechanic with this pair of Red Kap Men’s Zip-Front Cotton Coverall, because Wally’s so aware that any moment he might have to crawl into messy time to fix it that he wears them every day. Good on you, Wally.

And this cool transparent backpack, so next time racists want to accuse him of shoplifting they can shut the hell up.

(Please note that as an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.)

Comments? Questions? Leave ‘em below.