3sg jef fery

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

marți, 13 aprilie 2010

Book Talk: *Why Is My Mother Getting A Tattoo?*, by Jancee Dunn

Posted on 05:00 by Guy
Disclosure: I purchased this book for my personal library. Purchasing links included in this post generate referrals through my Amazon Affiliates account.

Why Is My Mother Getting  a Tattoo?: And Other Questions I Wish I  Never Had to Ask by Jancee Dunn
Why Is My Mother Getting a Tattoo?: And Other Questions I Wish I Never Had to Ask
Jancee Dunn
Villard (2009), Paperback original (ISBN 0345501926 / 9780345501929)
Essay/memoir, 224 pages

Opening Lines: "Last Thanksgiving, right about the time that our family had finished scraping up the last of our triple fleet of pies (pecan, chocolate, and pumpkin) my mother pushed away from the table, dabbed her lips with a napkin and calmly made an announcement. 
 "'I'm gettin' a tattoo,' she said.

"All of us froze. Most even stopped chewing, a testament to the gravity of the situation"
Book description: Despite her forty years and a successful career as a rock journalist, Jancee Dunn still feels like a teenager, especially around her parents and sisters. Looking around, Dunn realizes that she’s not alone in this regression: Her friends, all with successful jobs, marriages, and families of their own, still feel like kids around their moms and dads, too. That gets Dunn to thinking: Do we ever really grow up?

Why Is My Mother Getting a Tattoo? explores this phenomenon–through both Dunn’s coming to grips with getting older and her folks’ attempts to turn back the clock. In a series of hilarious and heartwarming essays, Dunn conspires with her sisters to finagle their way into the old family homestead, dissects the whys and wherefores of her parents’ obsession with newspaper clippings, confronts the seamy side of the JC Penney catalogs she paged through as a kid, and accompanies her sixtysomething mother to a New Jersey tattoo parlor, where Mom is giddy to get a raven inked onto her wrist. And Dunn does it all with humor and insight.


Comments: I genuinely enjoy reading Jancee Dunn. She's worked for Rolling Stone and O: The Oprah Magazine, she's been an MTV veejay and a Good Morning, America correspondent, and she's written one novel and two books of nonfiction - and yet her voice throughout remains down-to-earth and sweetly conversational.

Her most recent book is a collection of memoir/essays concerning recent events in the lives of her family, who we first got to know in But Enough About Me. The Dunns have their quirks, but they're ordinary quirks, if that makes sense. Jancee, her sisters, and her parents have remained close geographically and emotionally, and they discuss everything - spouses just have to get used to that. Readers become part of those discussions, which may ring familiar if you also come from a close, chatty family. Jancee shares the clippings about random topics her recently retired parents send her in the mail; in my family it's more likely to be e-mails, but it's the same idea. She relates transcripts of her daily phone calls with her best friend, Julie. She talks about her fear of heights, her love for catalogs, her unexpected - and entirely welcome - pregnancy at the age of forty-one...and yes, accompanying her mother to get that tattoo. She doesn't overshare, but her writing is both intimate and humorous, and as a reader, she makes me feel entirely welcome too.

This was an excellent choice for the 24-Hour Readathon - it's brief and doesn't have to be read at one sitting, so you can dip in and out of it between other books, which was my original intention. I changed my mind when I realized I could potentially read it all in one sitting, and I'm glad I did. Jancee Dunn's stories engage me, strike notes of familiarity, and make me chuckle in both recognition and appreciation of their humor. When I reviewed her first memoir, But Enough About Me, I said that I'd want to hang out with her, and I still do. It's probably for the best that my travels to New York City later this year won't take me into Brooklyn, or I just might look for the converted church she lives in with her husband and baby daughter.

Rating: 3.75/5

This book counts for the RYOB (Read Your Own Books) Challenge (7/20). the Memorable Memoirs Challenge, and the Blogging Authors Reading Project.

Other bloggers' reviews:
Cafe of Dreams

Buy Why Is My Mother Getting a Tattoo?: And Other  Questions I Wish I Never Had to Ask at Amazon.com
Trimiteți prin e-mail Postați pe blog!Trimiteți pe XDistribuiți pe Facebook
Posted in Blogging Authors Reading Challenge, Memorable Memoirs Reading Challenge, nonfiction, one book at a time, reading, reviews, RYOB Challenge | No comments
Postare mai nouă Postare mai veche Pagina de pornire

0 comentarii:

Trimiteți un comentariu

Abonați-vă la: Postare comentarii (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Book Talk: *The Lonely Polygamist*, by Brady Udall
    The Lonely Polygamist: A Novel Brady Udall W. W. Norton & Company (2010), Hardcover (ISBN 0393062627 / 9780393062625) Fiction, 608 pages...
  • Sunday Salon: The end (of the year) is coming!
    I finished and reviewed my 50th and 51st books of 2010 last week, although the reviews have yet to post here ( LibraryThing is all caught up...
  • BBAW 2010: Forgotten Treasures - Books Remembered and Recommended
      BBAW 2010:  A Treasure Chest of Infinite Books and Infinite Blogs Thursday—Forgotten Treasure Sure we’ve all read about Freedom and Mock...
  • BlogHer'10: What's the "publishing ecosystem" evolving into?
    I'll warn you now - my BlogHer'10 experiences will, once again, be the subject of several posts. There are a couple of sessions I...
  • Book Talk: *Mockingjay*, by Suzanne Collins (w/a few spoilers)
      Mockingjay (The Final Book of The Hunger Games ) Suzanne Collins Scholastic Press (2010), Hardcover (0439023513 / 9780439023511) Fiction (...
  • Book Talk: *Red Hook Road*, by Ayelet Waldman
    Red Hook Road Ayelet Waldman Doubleday (2010), Hardcover (ISBN 0385517866 / 9780385517867) Fiction, 352 pages Source : ARC (Advance Reader...
  • Sunday Salon: Writers, readers, and NaNoWriMo
      For the second year in a row, I'm publicly saying NO to National Novel Writing Month ( NaNoWriMo ) . I love to read, and I love to wr...
  • BBAW: New Treasures - Book Blog Discoveries
    BBAW has an overall theme this year: "A Treasure Chest of Infinite Books and Infinite Blogs." Monday—First Treasure We invite you...
  • Sunday Salon: Season of the Lists
    Year-end is fast approaching, like it or not, and one sign of that is the arrival of the Lists. Because I’m once again nursing a disloca...
  • Sunday Salon: Thankful for blog-driven reading, and Indie Lit Awards!
      Karen ’s comment on my entry for last week’s Weekend Assignment made me stop and think for a minute: “It's interesting that your hab...

Categories

  • 'riting
  • #DailyBookPic
  • 24-Hour Readathon
  • a bunch of books
  • announcements
  • Armchair BEA
  • Audiobook Challenge
  • audiobooks
  • BBAW
  • BEA11
  • BEA12
  • blog tour
  • Blogging Authors Reading Challenge
  • BlogHer
  • BlogHer Book Club
  • blogs elsewhere
  • book bloggers
  • BookBloggerCon
  • CBSLA Best of LA
  • Comic Con 2011
  • ComicCon 2010
  • contests and giveaways
  • Ebook Reading Challenge
  • Faith 'n' Fiction 2011
  • family
  • Favorites List
  • fiction
  • FnFRT
  • food
  • fotos
  • Friday Foto
  • Friday/Monday Foto
  • guest post
  • holidays
  • Indie Lit Awards
  • LA Moms Blog
  • links
  • memes and blogger games
  • Memorable Memoirs Reading Challenge
  • metabloggery
  • MomsLA
  • Monday Moment
  • mostly true stories
  • NaBloPoMo
  • nerd factor
  • news traffic and weather
  • nonfiction
  • one book at a time
  • pop culture: movies
  • pop culture: music
  • pop culture: TV
  • randomness
  • reading
  • retrospective
  • reviews
  • roundup
  • RYOB Challenge
  • ShelfAwareness
  • SheWrites
  • site stuff
  • So Cal
  • Sunday Salon
  • THE HANDMAID'S TALE Read-Along
  • THE SPARROW Read-Along
  • TheSmartlyLA
  • thinking out loud
  • Thoughts From My Reading
  • travel
  • Tuesday Tangents
  • Vacation 2010
  • Weekend Assignment
  • Weekend Review
  • Weekly Geeks
  • work

Blog Archive

  • ►  2012 (18)
    • ►  ianuarie (18)
  • ►  2011 (239)
    • ►  decembrie (14)
    • ►  noiembrie (19)
    • ►  octombrie (12)
    • ►  septembrie (18)
    • ►  august (22)
    • ►  iulie (16)
    • ►  iunie (20)
    • ►  mai (21)
    • ►  aprilie (22)
    • ►  martie (24)
    • ►  februarie (26)
    • ►  ianuarie (25)
  • ▼  2010 (243)
    • ►  decembrie (21)
    • ►  noiembrie (33)
    • ►  octombrie (29)
    • ►  septembrie (25)
    • ►  august (24)
    • ►  iulie (23)
    • ►  iunie (26)
    • ►  mai (22)
    • ▼  aprilie (28)
      • Week-End Review - FoB Hangover edition
      • Book Talk: *This One is Mine*, by Maria Semple
      • "That's How I (will) Blog" - next Tuesday! Come an...
      • My Festival of Books Report, 2010 edition
      • Book Talk: *The Lost Summer of Louisa May Alcott*,...
      • Sunday Salon 4/25: NOT the FoB Report
      • Week-End Review - with bonus Movie Review!
      • Book Talk (Part 2): On not believing what *Believe...
      • Book Talk (Part 1): *In the Land of Believers,* by...
      • Book Talk: *Get Lucky*, by Katherine Center (TLC B...
      • Comic Con: The Warm-Up Act - or, how we spent our ...
      • Sunday Salon 4/18: Get your Festival of Books tick...
      • Week-End Review 4/16: Links and "Question of the W...
      • Flea Market Finds - Tuesday Tangents (on Thursday)
      • Friday Night with The Author Guy (Christopher Moore)
      • Book Talk: *Why Is My Mother Getting A Tattoo?*, b...
      • Sunday Salon, post-Readathon and just under the wire!
      • 24-Hour Readathon - That's all, folks!
      • 24-Hour Readathon - One book down!
      • 24-Hour Readathon - It's ON!
      • Week-end Review: Links and Question of the Week
      • Brand management, the Catholic Church, and me
      • Book Talk, times two: *Undercover* and *Nothing Bu...
      • Tuesday Tangents: "Working for the Weekend(s)" edi...
      • Meeting a Real Character (Weekend Assignment #313)
      • Sunday Salon: Bookish tidings on Easter Sunday
      • Week-End Review: TWO Questions of the Week, plus l...
      • Dragons and Wimps, or last weekend at the movies
    • ►  martie (12)
Un produs Blogger.

Despre mine

Guy
Vizualizați profilul meu complet