My life as a villainess Essays

Laura Lippman, 1959-

Book - 2020

Collects the author's recent essays exploring motherhood as an older mom, her life as a reader, her relationships with her parents, her newspaper career, and her experiences as a novelist.

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BIOGRAPHY/Lippman, Laura
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Subjects
Genres
Essays
Autobiographies
Published
New York, NY : William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Laura Lippman, 1959- (author, -)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
x, 270 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780063007154
9780062997333
  • Part I: Game of Crones
  • The whole 60
  • Game of crones
  • Natural selection
  • The art of losing friends and alienating people
  • Part II: This be the other verse
  • My father's bar
  • The thirty-first stocking
  • Swing, interrupted
  • Revered ware
  • Part III: My life as a villainess
  • The Waco kid
  • Tweety bird
  • My life as a villainess
  • Part IV: Genius
  • A fine bromance
  • Saving Mrs. Banks
  • My brilliant friend
  • Men explain The wire to me.
Review by Booklist Review

For all of Lippman's success as a best-selling novelist and crime writer, she examines her life in pithy personal essays with a strong shot of ruefulness and not a shred of self-congratulation. In her first nonfiction title, she is confiding, sharply funny, and disarmingly candid about both her struggles and her privilege. Reflecting on age and womanhood, she champions stubborn self-acceptance, even self-love; she tells hilarious tales about being a bad friend, an older mom, and a single parent since her famous screenwriter husband is so often away. In the title essay, Lippman takes measure of professional battles, how she ended her first marriage, and how she "can live inside the skull" of all kinds of villains. Lippman portrays her younger self and her parents--her children's librarian mom, her newspaper columnist father--vibrantly recounts her first newspaper job in Waco, Texas, and defends social media. She revels in confession and connection, surprise and provocation, and she performs all with panache, wisdom, wit, and courage. Lippman asserts: "I'm a tough old bird," and readers will declare: and one helluva true-tale teller.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Self-awareness, a knack for observation, and a dose of snark fuel the uneven but occasionally potent debut collection from Edgar Award--winning crime novelist Lippman (The Lady in the Lake). As Lippman explains, "There is a sense of liberation in admitting to one's faults" and in fact she "had to stretch to earn the title" of villainess. The essays sometimes feel as though they could have gone deeper into their subject, but nuggets of insight show up consistently enough to compensate, as when she comments, "Our culture long ago made peace with the fragility of matrimony, but we still have high expectations for friendships." Lippman is at her best when confronting society's expectations of women, especially while discussing becoming a late-in-life mom. About menopause, she drily comments that it "doesn't make women want to die. It makes other people wish we would die, or at least disappear." Rightfully asking to be judged on her own terms, not on those of the women she cites as inevitable comparisons for a female essayist--Joan Didion, Nora Ephron, Susan Sontag--Lippman contributes an appealingly candid voice to the literary conversation. Agent: Vicky Bijur, Vicky Bijur Literary. (May)

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

Beloved crime fiction writer and avid tweetmeister Lippman makes an unconvincing case for her villainy in this collection. The essays, some new, some previously published, are overall a delight. She opens strong with "The Whole 60," in which she revels in her power and glory as she hits a milestone birthday. Following pieces meander through her life and times: her first career, as a journalist in Texas and in her hometown of Baltimore; an unsuccessful first marriage; a second successful marriage and motherhood at fiftysomething; ruminations on family and friends; her tendency to let down friends (readers may not be wholly convinced that she is "a shitty friend"); that time she was called in to the principal's office for subtweeting about mean girls who made her daughter miserable. In the final piece, "Men Explain The Wire to Me," Lippman deftly skewers the male fans of her husband David Simon's revered Baltimore-based TV show. A piece about how she helped Simon make friends with the late TV personality/chef Anthony Bourdain is moving and humorous as well. VERDICT Fans of Lippman's novels (The Lady in the Lake) and her Twitter followers will gobble up this short collection and beg for more nonfiction from this gifted storyteller. [See Prepub Alert, 11/11/19.]--Liz French, Library Journal

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

In her first book of nonfiction, bestselling crime novelist Lippman gathers 15 essays on motherhood, family life, and her writing career. Except for the six months after college when she worked part-time at "the finest Italian restaurant in Waco, Texas," Baltimore native Lippman always earned a living by her pen. First, she was a newspaper reporter who eventually went to work for the Baltimore Sun. Then, in 1997, she fulfilled a childhood fantasy and became a novelist. Here, the author offers a collection of personal essays that she started writing in 2017, in part to overcome a "distaste for the first-person pronoun." Mining personal experiences for material, Lippman provides humorous insights into her life as a writer, mother, and wife to acclaimed TV writer and producer David Simon. She opens the book with an essay about finding self-acceptance at age 60. After spending too much time struggling with her body image, she finally learned to say "the most infuriating [thing]" possible for a middle-aged woman: that she actually liked the way she looked. A positive self-image was the gift she wanted to give her young daughter, whom she discusses in "Game of Crones." Bucking convention, Lippman became a first-time mother to an adopted daughter while in her 50s, which led to numerous questions about whether the child was her granddaughter. A dedicated career woman, the author reveals how motherhood "made me less robotic [and] more inclined toward improvisation and spontaneity" and marked the beginning of the most successful period in her writing career. Yet for all her fame, Lippman still sees herself as a "happy gherkin alongside a big dill," Simon. Showrunner for TV cult favorite The Wire, Simon still keeps "pushing, pushing, pushing" and inspiring Lippman to never "live inside…success." Candid and quirky, this book will have special appeal to fans of her crime fiction. A wryly observed collection from a reliably good writer. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.