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The author of the New York Times bestseller The Idiot Girls' Action-Adventure Club tackles her biggest challenge yet: grown-up life.
The popularity of cultural signposts from Cathy Guisewite's Cathy comic strip to the Bridget Jones's Diary books and spin-offs suggest an ongoing, booming market for stories about young women with weight trauma, shopping dependence, nonstop romantic crises, and severe coping issues. Given that the subgenre isn't likely to go away any time soon, it's good to see someone approach it with the surreal wit and over-the-top mentality of Phoenix newspaper columnist Laurie Notaro. In her debut essay collection, The Idiot Girls' Action Adventure Club, she discussed life as a single party girl, in essays like "Men Are Stupid And I Rock!" In the follow-up, Autobiography Of A Fat Bride, she documents her surprisingly quick transition to married domestic woman with "adult" problems. Notaro's humor is self-deprecating, gorily specific, and raunchy: From meeting her husband-to-be while a booger hangs from her nose to panicking over bridal-dress fittings because she never shaves or wears underwear, she has an endless supply of body-issue-themed crude jokes, which she plays up to a mildly histrionic degree. Even her own wedding warrants a column about the massive precautions necessary to guard against crippling cramps, acne, menstrual-blood leakage, or "the Big Poo." She inflates her more external ordeals over taxes, a drug test, an air-conditioner purchase, home repair, and vet bills for a particularly destructive cat (which she secretly urges to "run into the light as fast as you can") into minor cataclysms. But unlike the Bridget Joneses of the world, she doesn't appear to take them seriously, or expect anyone else to. She's the victim of most of her own self-created calamities, but she invites readers to laugh at her self-victimization, as though encouraging them to deal with their own personal lives with more grace and less irrational terror. At the same time, she never acknowledges that self-victimization: By steadfastly remaining the heroine of her own stories, she maintains her dignity and avoids begging for sympathy. Autobiography Of A Fat Bride does venture beyond self-mockery for some slightly kinder looks at Notaro's friends and family, from the nephew she adores to the male friend she gives cruel advice. Autobiography never quite makes it to sentimentality, but it does mix its themes enough to prove that Notaro has more going for her than gross-out humor and sick wit. Like so many writers who play up the woman-on-the-verge-of-a-nervous-breakdown motif, Notaro is likely to appeal to a fairly narrow group of schadenfreude fans, who might empathize as well as sympathize, but are still laughing at her as much as with her. Still, thanks to lively prose and an unusually frank and forward outlook, she makes that both easy and pleasant.
More Reviews and RecommendationsLaurie Notaro has never written for Rolling Stone, Esquire, Harper's, The New Yorker, Lowrider, American Logger, Farm Show, or McSweeney's. She lives, and will probably die, in Phoenix, Arizona. Miraculously, this is her second book.
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December 27, 2008:
Holy Crap! She is the best writter ever. This is one of the best books I ever read. I read Fat Bride the month before I got married, not only did I survive the pre-wedding jitters. I found similarities in my own life and wedding plans. I like most people finished this book on our honey moon which ment a 4 hour plane ride, but I completely embarrased my new husband with uncontrollable outloud laugher. READ READ READ! anything by Laurie Notarto is worth all the money in the world, and is sanity saviing
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July 23, 2008: This was my favorite of the idiot girl series. I suggest you read them all in order and be prepared to laugh out loud.
The author of the New York Times bestseller The Idiot Girls’ Action-Adventure Club tackles her biggest challenge yet: grown-up life.
In Autobiography of a Fat Bride, Laurie Notaro tries painfully to make the transition from all-night partyer and bar-stool regular to mortgagee with plumbing problems and no air-conditioning. Laurie finds grown-up life just as harrowing as her reckless youth, as she meets Mr. Right, moves in, settles down, and crosses the toe-stubbing threshold of matrimony. From her mother's grade-school warning to avoid kids in tie-dyed shirts because their hippie parents spent their food money on drugs and art supplies; to her night-before-the-wedding panic over whether her religion is the one where you step on the glass; to her unfortunate overpreparation for the mandatory drug-screening urine test at work; to her audition as a Playboy centerfold as research for a newspaper story, Autobiography of a Fat Bride has the same zits-and-all candor and outrageous humor that made Idiot Girls an instant cult phenomenon.
In Autobiography of a Fat Bride, Laurie contemplates family, home improvement, and the horrible tyrannies of cosmetic saleswomen. She finds that life doesn't necessarily get any easier as you get older. But it does get funnier.
The popularity of cultural signposts from Cathy Guisewite's Cathy comic strip to the Bridget Jones's Diary books and spin-offs suggest an ongoing, booming market for stories about young women with weight trauma, shopping dependence, nonstop romantic crises, and severe coping issues. Given that the subgenre isn't likely to go away any time soon, it's good to see someone approach it with the surreal wit and over-the-top mentality of Phoenix newspaper columnist Laurie Notaro. In her debut essay collection, The Idiot Girls' Action Adventure Club, she discussed life as a single party girl, in essays like "Men Are Stupid And I Rock!" In the follow-up, Autobiography Of A Fat Bride, she documents her surprisingly quick transition to married domestic woman with "adult" problems. Notaro's humor is self-deprecating, gorily specific, and raunchy: From meeting her husband-to-be while a booger hangs from her nose to panicking over bridal-dress fittings because she never shaves or wears underwear, she has an endless supply of body-issue-themed crude jokes, which she plays up to a mildly histrionic degree. Even her own wedding warrants a column about the massive precautions necessary to guard against crippling cramps, acne, menstrual-blood leakage, or "the Big Poo." She inflates her more external ordeals over taxes, a drug test, an air-conditioner purchase, home repair, and vet bills for a particularly destructive cat (which she secretly urges to "run into the light as fast as you can") into minor cataclysms. But unlike the Bridget Joneses of the world, she doesn't appear to take them seriously, or expect anyone else to. She's the victim of most of her own self-created calamities, but she invites readers to laugh at her self-victimization, as though encouraging them to deal with their own personal lives with more grace and less irrational terror. At the same time, she never acknowledges that self-victimization: By steadfastly remaining the heroine of her own stories, she maintains her dignity and avoids begging for sympathy. Autobiography Of A Fat Bride does venture beyond self-mockery for some slightly kinder looks at Notaro's friends and family, from the nephew she adores to the male friend she gives cruel advice. Autobiography never quite makes it to sentimentality, but it does mix its themes enough to prove that Notaro has more going for her than gross-out humor and sick wit. Like so many writers who play up the woman-on-the-verge-of-a-nervous-breakdown motif, Notaro is likely to appeal to a fairly narrow group of schadenfreude fans, who might empathize as well as sympathize, but are still laughing at her as much as with her. Still, thanks to lively prose and an unusually frank and forward outlook, she makes that both easy and pleasant.
I love Laurie Notaro. I don't want to marry her -- she has, as her new book attests, married someone who is obviously perfect, someone capable of saying, "If I had to catch sex cooties, I'm glad they were your sex cooties." But I love her nonetheless. She may be the funniest writer in this solar system, especially if you can identify such crucial Earth items as Thirstbusters, Wonderbras or bridal magazines that make you "honestly believe you will look exquisite walking down the aisle dressed as a lemon meringue pie." Notaro, author of the bestselling The Idiot Girls' Action-Adventure Club, confides all sorts of secrets about her wedding (why does that jerk of a videographer manage to catch her simultaneously neglecting to suck in her stomach and trying to pry a meatball fragment out of her teeth with her tongue?) and marriage (exactly how does one convince a plumber that her husband was the one who flushed all those tampons to cause that tragic sewage problem?). Good news, though: Life as a married, home-owning adult really isn't that different from being a single Idiot Girl. You can still eat cheese out of a spray can and spar with your QVC-addicted mother, even if you can't pass the No. 2 Pencil Test (two pencils, two breasts, you get the idea) or understand those new Levi's commercials. "I am completely immature," Notaro writes, and to that we say: Amen! And pass the Cheez Whiz.
Notaro's first book, The Idiot Girls' Action-Adventure Club (2002), achieved cult status and became a surprise best-seller. Returning with another uproarious collection of personal essays from the dating front, Notaro proves that her first-time success wasn't a fluke. Detailing her trip down the bumpy road to matrimony, Notaro outrageously entertains with a sweetly skewed outlook on everything from breaded meats to baby wipes. Having endured boyfriends from hell and survived kamikaze-style dating, Notaro does the unthinkable by getting someone to fall in love with her! This, in Notaro's world, is not the equivalent of the Holy Grail. First there are in-laws to impress and weddings to plan, both without inflicting bodily harm or doing jail time. Next come the challenges of permanent cohabitation, with its surprise revelations of untoward bodily functions and appearances. Finally, there are the joys of first-time home ownership and joint income-tax filing. Notaro tackles them all with the inimitable, acerbic wit and ruthless, self-deprecating candor that have deservedly earned her legions of loyal fans.Carol Haggas
Notaro's first book, The Idiot Girls' Action-Adventure Club (2002), achieved cult status and became a surprise best-seller. Returning with another uproarious collection of personal essays from the dating front, Notaro proves that her first-time success wasn't a fluke. Detailing her trip down the bumpy road to matrimony, Notaro outrageously entertains with a sweetly skewed outlook on everything from breaded meats to baby wipes. Having endured boyfriends from hell and survived kamikaze-style dating, Notaro does the unthinkable by getting someone to fall in love with her! This, in Notaro's world, is not the equivalent of the Holy Grail. First there are in-laws to impress and weddings to plan, both without inflicting bodily harm or doing jail time. Next come the challenges of permanent cohabitation, with its surprise revelations of untoward bodily functions and appearances. Finally, there are the joys of first-time home ownership and joint income-tax filing. Notaro tackles them all with the inimitable, acerbic wit and ruthless, self-deprecating candor that have deservedly earned her legions of loyal fans.Carol Haggas
Notaro willingly opens the door to her oddball life, presenting the reader with quirky little vignettes laced with sharp-eyed observations on the ironies of life. As she dishes out her unique brand of outrageous humor, she also tosses out a few kernels of truth — the kind that hit the reader right between the eyes. Steve Powers
Notaro (The Idiot Girls' Action-Adventure Club) opens with enough dumped-by-loser-boyfriend stories that readers will share her skepticism when Good Guy finally appears. "He was an endangered species," Notaro writes. "[T]he only thing that could make him more valuable was if he were albino." Since Notaro can't keep Good Guy drunk and clueless forever, she switches to Plan B: frying cutlets, her major life skill. It works, and soon enough they're happily married. If this sounds mature and responsible, guess again. Other people might be able to buy a house, babysit their nephew, buy a new bra or seed their lawn without it being the least bit funny, but not Notaro. Consider the time she and her husband got a new puppy so untrainable it ate from the kitty litter box. Watching her husband get down on all fours and growl like a dog to show kitty who's in charge, Notaro comments, "Well, then, I'm not going to bother making dinner.... The cat just had a bowel movement big enough for the both of you." True, there's a lot of bathroom humor, but it's Notaro's odd take on the ordinary that's funniest. "H&R Block is really Practice Prison," a taste of what tax evaders can expect. Her sister using a breast pump looks like "a hybrid of Barbarella and a Holstein." And who else but Notaro can whisper to her (unwanted) cat as she crates him up for a trip to the vet: "if you see a bright, white light, run toward it"? (July) Forecast: Notaro's first book was originally self-published, picked up by Villard and spent two months on the New York Times bestseller list. Fat Bride's attractive price and funny jacket (of a woman leaning into the refrigerator) will undoubtedly lure in fans from her first book and new readers, too. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
The adage "Don't judge a book by its cover" is especially true of humor columnist Notaro's latest work. Her second collection of real-life stories-a follow-up to her best-selling The Idiot Girls' Action-Adventure Club: True Tales from a Magnificent and Clumsy Life-has little to do with either the title or the cover, which depicts a voluptuous woman in fringed panties with her head ensconced in a refrigerator. In fact, except for a few comments about her Italian American family's stereotypical predilection toward food, this series of personal vignettes has little to do with Notaro's being overweight. Instead, the thirtysomething author relates humorous stories of her dating life prior to her engagement and marriage, stories that try hard, but ultimately fail, to capture the sophistication and wit of Helen Fielding's Bridget Jones's Diary. Her tales of married life are more insightful, and she often points out the humor and absurdity in the mundane situations that husbands and wives face daily: her struggles with the air conditioner in the 70-year-old bungalow the couple purchased in Arizona, which she describes as a "corroded swamp cooler" but cannot afford to replace; her mistakenly using her husband's toothbrush as a cleaning and craft brush; and the yearly stress of the holidays, which she and her husband deal with in March when finally taking down the Christmas tree. On the whole, while not a groundbreaking effort, Notaro's depiction of her life as a series of amusing anecdotes provides a fun read for fans of humor essays. Suitable for public libraries. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 3/1/03.]-Donna Marie Smith, Palm Beach Cty. Lib. Syst., FL Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
Loading...| It's Not You, It's Me | 3 | |
| Super Idiot Girl: The Sad Life and Lonely Times of Princess Enabler | 12 | |
| You Never Call Me | 16 | |
| The Good Guy | 22 | |
| Dog Girl Bites Back | 28 | |
| The Fat Bride Is Not a Happy Magic Marker | 34 | |
| Hair of the Dog | 40 | |
| Dreading the Wedding | 44 | |
| Naked with a Stranger | 48 | |
| The Suck of Bridal G-Force | 53 | |
| Don't Drink the Kool-Aid | 56 | |
| Dead Bride Walking | 60 | |
| "If You Get Divorced Within a Year, You Owe Your Father $35.78 a Dinner Times Two Hundred": Words of Wisdom on My Wedding Day | 63 | |
| It Takes Guts | 74 | |
| Grin and Bare It | 78 | |
| I Think at Night It Flies | 82 | |
| Sweet Ride | 86 | |
| Marathon Man | 90 | |
| My Poor Sister | 94 | |
| Following Instructions | 97 | |
| The M&M, the Bee, and the Man Baby | 101 | |
| Burning the Bra | 104 | |
| The Lonely, Brown House | 108 | |
| Erica's Moving Adventure | 111 | |
| The Squatter | 114 | |
| A Pound of Flesh | 118 | |
| Home Sweat Home | 123 | |
| Spooky Little Girl Like You | 127 | |
| The Little King | 131 | |
| What's on That Dog's Butt? | 135 | |
| Red Mice | 139 | |
| The Hands of Death | 143 | |
| The Slattern's Blue Panties | 147 | |
| White Noise, White Soap, and Man Desire: Marriage Advice from Two Mean Girls | 151 | |
| As Time Goes By | 155 | |
| Enough with the Love: Aberrant Tales of an Absolutely and Completely Normal Family (as Told to My Therapist) | 160 | |
| Jingle Hell | 164 | |
| The Dead Zone | 170 | |
| Peace, You Stupid Asshole | 174 | |
| My Mother, My Self, My God | 178 | |
| It Only Says That on the Box | 185 | |
| The Craft Toothbrush | 194 | |
| The Littlest Operative | 198 | |
| You Make Me Sick | 202 | |
| Big Black Bastard | 206 | |
| Boys and Girlas | 211 | |
| Pissing Off the Pee Taker | 215 | |
| What Drugs Can Do to a Family | 219 | |
| You Have Already Been Preapproved for a Decline | 222 | |
| Tiger Woods Doesn't Know Where I Live | 226 | |
| I Think Someone Forgot About My Needs | 232 | |
| Queen Bee | 235 | |
| Thirty-fffff | 239 | |
| Walk All Over You | 243 | |
| Acknowledgments | 255 |
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