Start without me (I'll be there in a minute)

Gary Janetti

Book - 2022

"Gary Janetti is bothered. By a lot of things. And thank God he's here to tell us. He's bothered that he has to play football in high school gym when he'd rather be in the guidance counselor's office, faking sick and dishing about the latest dramas on his beloved soap operas. He's annoyed when, as a kid growing up in Queens, New York, there's a serial killer loose in his neighborhood, but Carole Burnett is on tv and he really doesn't want to miss it. And don't get him started on how a perfectly planned vacation can be ruined by a bad hotel room. Start Without Me is for anyone who has ever felt like they don't quite fit in. For all of us that have thought, just maybe, those small, petty sligh...ts that life flings at us, over and over, are worth getting our feathers ruffled over. A book for any of us that have felt the joy in holding a lifelong grudge. Which is to really say, Start Without Me is for all of us. Janetti turns his acid tongue, and secretly beating heart, to the moments and times that defined him, when, as he writes, "most everything was wonderful. It was only tiny, little things," that stuck like a sharp pebble in a shoe. Deeply poignant, savagely funny, and slyly tender, Start Without Me will have readers wishing it would never end"--

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Subjects
Genres
Humor
Gay biographies
LGBTQ+ biographies
Published
New York : Henry Holt and Company 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Gary Janetti (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
x, 192 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781250225856
9781250853455
  • The Carol Burnett Show
  • Teaching Little Fingers How to Play
  • J's
  • The Wizard of Oz
  • Pen Pals
  • Commencement Address
  • Sister Wilma
  • Christmas
  • Tan
  • Destination Wedding
  • Grandma
  • Movies
  • Village Bath Club
  • Trip Advisor Review
  • Irene
  • Gay Restaurant
  • A Chorus Line
  • Graduation
  • I'd Like to Thank
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Writer and producer Janetti (Do You Mind If I Cancel?) briskly trots through the most memorable moments of his life in this hilarious outing. In vignettes packed with zingers ("The Catholics are the RuPaul's Drag Race of religions. We put on a show, honey"), he reveals how his refusal to live on any terms but his own took root early when, instead of going out to play as a kid in the 1970s, he opted to watch The Carol Burnett Show in his basement. Sports weren't his calling, either (their rules were "as indecipherable to me as ancient Greek"), though track wasn't bad--"All gay people can run, so no problem there." While his strength lies firmly in his acerbic humor, Janetti has a softer side, too, as seen when he writes of finding a home in theater in college and waxes poetic about Judy Garland, proclaiming The Wizard of Oz to be the "gayest" film of all time: "At only sixteen years old already knows real pain. The kind of pain that most gay children can also identify with." His views on raising a child today are perfectly calibrated, too: "No, thanks, I'm not equipped to deal with whatever the fuck is coming... after TikTok." Pithy and profane, this entertains from start to finish. (Apr.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In his latest essay collection (following Do You Mind If I Cancel?), Janetti (a producer of TV, including Family Guy and Will & Grace) recalls growing up in New York City with his mother, father, and sister. A consistent theme of Janetti's essays is the experience of not fitting in (at home; at school); he describes struggling to make friends as a child and says it was easier for him to relate to adults than to kids his own age. Some of Janetti's are funnier than others, and some might be too unrelatable to readers. The memoir's highlight is Janetti's account of his mother's and his aunt's conversations about his grandmother, who died shortly before the author was born; here Janetti reveals a softer side of himself, explores his Italian roots, and reflects on his grandmother's life. As in his previous book, here Janetti balances humor and seriousness in writing about the moments in life that have defined him. VERDICT While the cynical humor will not be for everyone, Janetti's memoir will be a solid choice for those who liked Do You Mind If I Cancel? or who follow his social media.--Michelle Lettus

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A maestro of the mundane strains to lend substance to his humor. In his second book, Janetti, a TV writer, producer, and actor, delivers a narrative full of stratospherically over-the-top pronouncements and lurid asides--and that's just about his childhood in Queens. In his account of growing up gay, the author visits many familiar touchstones, occasionally uncorking a tart observation, though few are terribly original. Janetti holds forth on his distaste for the outdoors, tribulations in high school gym class, the fallacy of college preparing one for life, musical theater, and his tendency toward misanthropy: "I'm constantly maneuvering myself through life to be the farthest away as possible from people," he writes, not quite tongue-in-cheek. "If I can hear your voice you're too close." It may be shtick, but the author can also be venomous at times, and his wit seems labored. "Maybe I met enough people over the years to realize that they just start repeating themselves after a while," he writes. "So you're never really meeting someone new. Just another version of someone else you know. 'I already have one of you,' I often find myself thinking while talking to a person I've just met." The pieces in this collection allow the author to ramble on incessantly, usually about trivial matters. While it's true that great comedy often springs from such preoccupations, the majority of Janetti's jokes fall flat. His self-deprecating recollections cannot hide the fact that much of his comedy is dismissive or whiny. While there is solid advice for 20-somethings entering the world of independence--and a few touching moments--sarcasm is the principal arrow in his quiver, and it gets tiresome. Being judgmental can be wickedly amusing in a Woody Allen on-a-park-bench-pillorying-people sort of way. But it's a double-edged sword. Janetti's "vulnerability," when revealed, is simultaneously so snarky that it's hard to empathize with him. Superficial and arch to a fault. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.