Girl logic The genius and the absurdity

Iliza Shlesinger, 1983-

Book - 2017

"From breakout stand-up comedian Iliza Shlesinger comes a subversively funny collection of essays and observations on a confident woman's approach to friendship, singlehood, and relationships." -- Publisher's annotation.

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Subjects
Genres
Humor
Essays
Published
New York, NY : Weinstein Books 2017.
Language
English
Main Author
Iliza Shlesinger, 1983- (author)
Physical Description
xii, 241 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781602863231
  • Foreword Love Me Some Iliza
  • Introduction Girl Logic: It Doesn't Mean You're "Crazy"-It Just Means You're a Girl
  • 1. You're a Woman-Be Confident! ("But Not So Confident That It Makes Anyone Else Insecure" Is Actually What They Mean)
  • 2. Case Clothed
  • Two and a Half Guy Logic A Primer
  • 3. Oh Boy, It's a Guys' Girl
  • 4. Sex: A Comprehensive Guide. JK, but I Did Write a Lot
  • 5. Perfect Love, Perfect Life: The Ultimate Girl Fantasy
  • 6. How to Text a Man Without Throwing Your Phone Through a Window
  • 7. Sorry, I Can't Hear You over How Single You Are
  • 8. Girl on Girl
  • 9. The Unfunny Chromosome
  • 10. It's All About the "At Bats"
  • Afterword I Care, You Care, We All Care, but... Not All the Time
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A successful comedian tries to square gender stereotypes with the realities of how women really live.Shlesinger, a winner of NBC's Last Comic Standing, calls her debut book a celebration of womanhood, though her own life and stand-up routine have hardly been paragons of feminist resistance. She locates her moment of awakening in a 2015 episode in which a male comic mocked a fellow female comic. Emboldened to seek equality, she sets out to define and deconstruct the "have-it-all" mentality forced on American women, the obsession to have the perfect partner, profession, and physique. However, despite her profession and stated goal to increase empathy, the author's recent realizations are neither especially funny nor noteworthy. Shlesinger leans on hackneyed clichs, such as dissecting the so-called guys' girl, only to reveal she once hid behind the stereotype of the sports-loving, beer-drinking woman. A handful of the anecdotes about dating and workplace drama are humorous, but most rely on the dated conventions the author supposedly seeks to abolish. Some profanity-laden diatribes come dangerously close to being offensive for their lack of nuance about race and sexual orientation. The takeaway messages of the book are important: cultivate confidence, develop the courage to be different, refuse catty competition with other women. Unfortunately, the intended lessons are often lost in the author's frenetic chattere.g., an entire chapter describing how women should text menand memoir-style meanderings through her childhood and adolescence, many of which lack resolution. In a handbook seemingly meant for teens, the faux adolescent tone feels forced and obscures what could be an empowering message about how it is never too late to counter the reductive nature of stereotypes. Instead of instructions for how to grow up, this reads like a series of theories not yet fully formed. An amusing stand-up bit buckles under the weight of a book-length treatment. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.