Review by New York Times Review
Nora Ephron finds new lessons in familar tales of divorce, her mother's alcoholism and Hollywood success. NORA EPHRON'S new book of essays is titled "I Remember Nothing," but that's a sop. She remembers everything, and while some of the material in this book is tantalizingly fresh and forthright, some of it we've seen before. Which doesn't mean it's not just as entertaining the second or even third time around, offered in each new iteration with a few more spicy details. Which is all just another way of saying: Does Carl Bernstein lie awake at night wondering how the hell his ex-wife of so many years ago (they were divorced in 1980) turned his marital indiscretion into a multimedia juggernaut spanning the decades? I'll get back to that. "I Remember Nothing" is Ephron's follow-up to "I Feel Bad About My Neck," her 2006 best seller subtitled "And Other Thoughts on Being a Woman." They were really her thoughts on aging women, bulging handbags and sagging wattles, spliced into an entertaining, chatty memoir. In "I Remember Nothing," we get more of the same, sometimes verbatim. Readers of "I Feel Bad About My Neck" will recall that Ephron was hired by The New York Post as a reporter in the early 1960s after writing a parody of the paper: "The editors of The Post are upset about the parody, but the publisher of The Post is amused. 'If they can parody The Post, they can write for it,' she says. 'Hire them.'" In the new book, we get this: "The editors of The Post wanted to sue, but the publisher, Dorothy Schiff, said: 'Don't be ridiculous. If they can parody The Post they can write for it. Hire them.'" In the last book, Ephron's mother counsels, "Never ever buy a red coat." In the new book, we hear her mother again: "Never buy a red coat." Sometimes Ephron reuses phrases that, even years later, catch the eye - like "slough of despond." (In the last book, the slough was encountered when cabbage strudel could not be located. In the new book, said slough is entered into when contemplating the Internet.) In "I Remember Nothing," Ephron plows through the events surrounding her divorce from Bernstein in an essay called "The D Word." Again. Remember, she wrote a novel, "Heartburn," about the philandering cad and their divorce, and then she wrote the screenplay for the movie adaptation, in which she was played by Meryl Streep. She also wrote about the divorce in her previous book, and now we get some more about it in this one. But every time she gives us some new little bone to gnaw on. Ephron fans will recall the moment in "Heartburn" (the novel and the movie) when Rachel (really Ephron) goes to the Georgetown jeweler to have her ring reset and the jeweler asks her how she liked the necklace. Of course, that rascally husband hasn't bought his wife a necklace while she was in the hospital giving birth to their second child; it's a gift for his mistress. In "I Remember Nothing," we learn that in reality Ephron found a receipt from James Robinson Antiques (what a juicy piece of gossip! James Robinson Antiques: such a stuffy place to buy a gift for a mistress!) and called up pretending to be her husband's assistant. She claimed she needed to know what Bernstein had bought so it could be insured. The clerk told her it was for an antique porcelain box inscribed with the words "I Love You Truly." THEY say books are very much like children. I wonder if Bernstein knew at the appropriate coital moment back in, oh, 1979 or so, exactly how many children he was unleashing upon the planet? Did he ever think it would be millions and millions - of copies, that is? Of essays and books and magazine articles and DVDs and audio books and e-books and Blu-ray discs? I'm beginning to feel for the guy. But "I Remember Nothing" does at times give us more depth and gravity and an actual, almost gravely serious reflection on divorce, duplicity, disease. In "The D Word," Ephron tells us she can't think of anything good about divorce from the children's perspective. "You can't kid yourself about that," she argues, "although many people do. They say things like, It's better for the children not to grow up with their parents in an unhappy marriage. But unless the parents are beating each other up, or abusing the children, kids are better off if their parents are together. Children are much too young to shuttle between houses. They're too young to handle the idea that the two people they love most in the world don't love each other any more, if they ever did." The essays about her mother's alcoholism and Ephron's sense of betrayal by the writer Lillian Hellman cover previously uncharted territory and are also among the most thoughtful parts of the book. Eventually, she came to feel deceived by both: Hellman for a bit too brightly over-polishing her legends and Ephron's mother for drinking herself to death at the age of 57. "For a long time before she died, I wished my mother were dead," Ephron explains. "And then she died, and it wasn't one of those things where I thought, Why did I think that? What was wrong with me? What kind of person would wish her mother dead? No, it wasn't one of those things at all. My mother had become a complete nightmare." Those are not easy words to write about the supermother who put The New Yorker's Lillian Ross in her place. (Another wonderful story included in this collection.) Apart from her penchant for repetition, my only quibble with Ephron is all this I-remember-nothing talk. How can we take it seriously from a woman who is a famous movie director, screenwriter, best-selling author, blogger and mother of two socialized, successful adult men? How can a woman who has been nominated for three Oscars complain about what an inadequate brain she has? Isn't it sort of like Meg Ryan in "You've Got Mail" looking all rumpled and sneezing into the arm of her bathrobe - but rich and powerful Tom Hanks still falls in love with her? Who falls in love with a woman with a lousy temper and a dribbling nose who lives in a walk-up apartment that in real life probably smells of cat food? How can a woman who says she remembers nothing and can't recognize her own sister get it together to direct movies and write all these books? It's seems ungenuine, like the supermodel who says she never exercises and eats three cheese-burgers a day. That's right. There's so much to love about Nora Ephron, but there's just as much to hate about her. Famous people play her in movies; she directs famous people in the movies she writes. She's happily married, as she also, only passingly (details! details!), reminds us in these books of hers. (She is married to the screenwriter Nick Pileggi, widely known to be a very nice, exceedingly accomplished person.) She looks amazingly good for an almost-septuagenarian - for anyone, any age, frankly - despite the flip of hair on the back of her head, a cowlick-turning-bald spot she refers to as "an Aruba." For all those steaks cooked in butter and extra-egg-yolk omelets and chocolate cream pies she professes to enjoy, she's got a trim figure. But you can't hate her. You love her. She's self-effacing and brilliant. I use lines of hers all the time. Just the other day, my 1-year-old and I were playing with his kitchen set and he picked up the pretend pepper and said, "Pepper." I held it over his pretend pot of stew and said, "Would you like some pepper with your paprikash?" It just came out. But it was so funny the way Billy Crystal said as much in "When Harry Met Sally" (written by Ephron, whose script earned one of those Oscar nominations). She's like Benjamin Franklin or Shakespeare: her words are now part of the fabric of the English language. Whenever we talk about "white man's overbite" - another one I use, or at least think, all the time - we're quoting her. Yes, there's some rehashing here, but that's what we expect - what we love - from Ephron. She's familiar but funny, boldly outspoken yet simultaneously reassuring. In much of her work, we get a story about betrayal, but the heroine picks up and moves on. Death of a friend or family member? Look on the bright side: there might be an inheritance somewhere, or at least a corn bread pudding recipe. (Sorry, that was the last book. In this one, it's a bread and butter pudding recipe.) LET'S face it. When most of us get divorced, Meryl Streep is not going to play us in the movie version of our lives. Because there will be no movie version of our lives. But Ephron is the poster girl for the religion of When Life Gives You Lemons, Make Lemonade. And most of us can't make lemonade - or corn bread pudding - the way she can. Let's face it. When most of us get divorced, Meryl Streep is not going to play us in the movie version of our lives. Alex Kuczynski is the author of "Beauty Junkies: Inside Our $15 Billion Obsession With Cosmetic Surgery."
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [December 12, 2010]
Review by Booklist Review
The legions of readers who loved I Feel Bad about My Neck (2006) will pounce on Ephron's pithy new collection. A master of the jujitsu essay, Ephron leaves us breathless with rueful laughter. As the title suggests, she writes about the weird vagaries of memory as we age, although she is happy to report that the Senior Moment has become the Google Moment. Not that any gadget rescued her when she failed to recognize her own sister. But the truth is, Ephron remembers a lot. Take her stinging reminiscence of her entry into journalism at Newsweek in the early 1960s, when girls, no matter how well qualified, were never considered for reporter positions. An accomplished screenwriter (When Harry Met Sally . . . and Julie & Julia) in a family of screenwriters, Ephron looks further back to her Hollywood childhood and her mother's struggles with alcohol. Whether she takes on bizarre hair problems, culinary disasters, an addiction to online Scrabble, the persistent pain of a divorce, or that mean old devil, age, Ephron is candid, self-deprecating, laser-smart, and hilarious. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Now a popular blogger in addition to everything else, Ephron hit it so big with her last best-seller, a 500,000 print run is planned for her latest.--Seaman, Donna Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Ephron's humorous observations on aging so beloved in I Feel Bad About My Neck continue in this collection of sprightly essays on everything from her deep affection for Google to memories of her complicated relationship with the famously irascible playwright, Lillian Hellmann. Ephron's voice has a nice grain to it, but where it should skip and flow to mimic the conversational patter of her prose, it stumbles and drags. Ephron enunciates so carefully and pauses so haltingly, the audiobook sounds more like bad amateur theater rather than an acclaimed humorist reading her own material. Stripped of the author's light touch and self-deprecation, the jokes fall flat, and Ephron's quips on, say, going to the bookstore to buy a book on Alzheimer's and forgetting the name of the book, are likely to elicits more cringes than chuckles. A Knopf hardcover. (Dec.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
In a recent NPR interview, Ephron shared with listeners a fundamental lesson she learned from her mother about humor: "If you slip on a banana peel, people laugh at you, but if you tell people you slipped on a banana peel, it's your joke." In this follow-up to the national best seller I Feel Bad About My Neck (2006)-also available from Books on Tape/Random Audio and read by the author-Ephron takes the banana peels of life and aging and turns them into funny, relatable, and sometimes touching stories. The chapters on email and journalism are particularly amusing, while the accounts of Ephron's divorce and her mother's alcoholism show a different side to the author/director best known for her comedy. Ephron herself reads, in the manner of a best girlfriend. One doesn't have to be on the other side of 50 to appreciate her wit; recommended. [The Knopf hc, published in November 2010, was an LJ Best Seller; the Vintage pb will publish in November 2011.-Ed.]-Theresa Horn, St. Joseph Cty. P.L., South Bend, IN (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Bland, often rambling anecdotes from the acclaimed director and screenwriter.Ephron (I Feel Bad About My Neck, 2006, etc.) returns to the literary scene with a collection of essays that thematically hover around the issue of aging. "Once I went to a store to buy a book about Alzheimer's disease and forgot the name of it," she writes. The author compounds this humorous memory lapse alongside dozens of more egregious slips, leading to the conclusion, "All this makes me feel sad, and wistful, but mostly it makes me feel old." Ephron remains unapologetic throughout her waxing nostalgia, continually referring to a bygone era where people didn't use the F-word and, "I'll tell you something else: they didn't drink wine then. Nobody knew about wine." Throughout, the author engages in heavy doses of name-dropping, but she remains aloof. In many ways, Ephron's humor functions as a defense mechanism against aging, and while she pokes fun at her thinning hair and fading memory, the reader anxiously awaits an honest portrayal of the woman herself. "The D Word," a firsthand account of the difficulties of divorce, offers a rare and refreshing glimpse into the author's world, though in the final lines the reader is corralled back into familiar terrain: "for a long time, the fact that I was divorced was the most important thing about me. And now it's not. Now the most important thing about me is that I'm old." "Journalism: A Love Story" and "Going to the Movies" offer similar heartfelt accounts of a swiftly changing world, yet Ephron's willingness to open up to the reader remains the exception, not the rule. Further, the majority of her Andy Rooneyesque musings lack profunditye.g., the opening to "The O Word," in which each sentence occupies its own paragraph: "I'm old. I am sixty-nine years old. I'm not really old, of course. Really old is eighty. But if you are young, you would definitely think that I'm old. No one actually likes to admit that they're old. The most they will cop to is that they're older. Or oldish."Only occasionally reaches emotional depthseems like a tardy attempt to capitalize on the success of I Feel Bad About My Neck.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.