Memoirs and misinformation

Jim Carrey, 1962-

Book - 2020

"A semi-autobiographical novel follows the experiences of a successful but lonely, slightly overweight movie star who seeks to escape depression through a new romance and an Oscar-worthy role, only to discover the universe's alternative plans."--Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographical fiction
Humorous fiction
Satirical literature
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Jim Carrey, 1962- (author)
Other Authors
Dana Vachon (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"A Novel"--Jacket.
"A Borzoi Book"--Title page verso.
Physical Description
255 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780525655978
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Actor Carrey's first novel, cowritten with Vachon, author of Mergers and Acquisitions (2007), focuses on a heightened version of Carrey's life, one that swirls in a miasma of celebrity, wealth, power, excess, and hubris. In an emotional and spiritual crisis, Carrey has gained weight, and photos of his unhappy state have been sent around the world. But then he meets Georgie and quickly falls in love, and screenwriter Charlie Kaufman (who also, in the real world, has a forthcoming debut novel, Antkind) offers him an absurd but potentially Oscar-worthy role. Although Carrey constantly spouts spiritual ideals, he craves that recognition. Throughout, Carrey has flashbacks to his Canadian childhood, which are some of the most interesting parts of the novel. Reminiscent of Mark Leyner's absurdist depictions of wealth (The Sugar Frosted Nutsack, 2012) and with a similarly otherworldly depiction of L.A. in A. M. Homes' This Book Will Save Your Life (2006), this is an engaging, fun tale that plays with the public perceptions of celebrities, questions our compulsive need to view, and contains a gloriously off-the-wall conclusion.

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

More Scooby Doo than Charlie Kaufman, Carrey's frenetic debut is a cartoonish fever dream darkened by middle-aged loneliness and existential terror. The story--written in the third person with Vachon (Mergers and Acquisitions) about an actor named Jim Carrey who found fame and fortune in blockbusters such as Ace Ventura: Pet Detective and creative fulfillment in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind--begins in medias res with Jim holed up in his Brentwood, Calif., fortress, feeling low enough to accept a role in the loathsome animated feature Hungry Hungry Hippos in Digital 3-D. The authors then jump back in time to Jim's short, disastrous marriage to a cable action star and an aborted Kaufman-penned Mao Zedong biopic amid flashes of Jim's bleak memories of growing up in Toronto. In between, Jim spars with his friend Nicholas Cage ("we battle ancient mojo in my black sand shadow dojo") and rants against capitalism and Hollywood. A surprisingly touching moment occurs on the set of Hippos, where Jim meets the digital essence of his idol, Rodney Dangerfield, who pays tribute to Jim's dead father. But for the most part, the characters are underdeveloped, and the sketchy plot loses momentum amid interchangeable set pieces. Dip in for the laughs, but slip out before the closing credits. Agent: David Kuhn, Aevitas Creative Management. (May)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A mad fever dream starring Jim Carrey, incorporating morsels of autobiography with adventures involving Nicolas Cage, Kelsey Grammer, Taylor Swift, Anthony Hopkins, Goldie Hawn, Sean Penn, and many more. "They say his empire was ruined by the same psychosis that found him, at the end, driving around Tucson with a loaded Uzi on his lap, ranting in word salad, high on methamphetamine." This remark is made about a fictional celebrity guru named Natchez Gushue, but when you encounter it in Chapter 2 you may wonder if it also applies to the creators of this book. Carrey and his collaborator Vachon pull out all the stops as their protagonist Jim Carrey careens from midlife blues through love and career complications toward the apocalypse. (The actual apocalypse, in which the world ends.) "He was nearing fifty, his fans aging, too. His talent was such that Hollywood could not replace him in its usual way, the kind of body snatching that saw Emma Stone swapped in for Lindsay Lohan, Leonardo DiCaprio taking over for River Phoenix." The question is, should he stage his comeback with "Disney's Untitled Play-Doh Fun Factory Project" or with a star turn as Mao Zedong in a biopic by Charlie Kaufman? Mixing the memoir with the misinformation, as the title suggests, is not the clearest or most powerful way Carrey might have presented the story of his life. Did his parents really tell everyone to feel free to beat him, "joking but not really"? Was an affair with Linda Ronstadt in 1982 "the only truly selfless love he'd ever known"? Is the scene where Carrey remembers telling Rodney Dangerfield a joke on the older comic's deathbed ("Don't worry Rodney, I'm gonna let everyone know you're really gay. That kind of thing isn't frowned on anymore") real? Moments of candor and alarming or moving revelations are a bit lost in the mad rush from Hungry Hungry Hippos in Digital 3D to the end of the world, when "Cher and Dolly Parton whizzed by overhead, both singing Leonard Cohen's 'Hallelujah.' " If you really like Jim Carrey, stick out the insanity for the gems of comic fantasy and the nuggets of memoir gold. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Prologue   They knew him as Jim Carrey.   And by the middle of that December his lawn had burned to a dull, amber brittle. And at night, after the sprinklers' ten minutes of city-rationed watering, the grass blades floated in pooled water-- limp and wasted like his mother's hair in the final morphine sweats.   The city of Los Angeles had been moving hellward since April, with bone- dry reservoirs and strings of scorching days, the forecasts reading like a sadist's charm bracelet, 97- 98- 105- 103. Last week an F-16 had flashed like a switch-blade through the ash- filled sky just as one of the gardeners on the Hummingbird Road estate collapsed of sunstroke and fell into seizures. The man fought as they carried him to the house, saying the Virgin Mary had promised him a slow dance for three dollars in the cool shade of the ravine. At night came the Santa Anas, those devil winds that sapped the soul, that set police sirens wailing as the sunsets burned through napalm oranges into sooty mauves. Then each morning a smoggy breath would draw across the canyons and into the great house, passing through air filters recently equipped with sensors to detect assassination by nerve gas.   He was bearded and bleary eyed after months of break-down and catastrophe. He lay naked in his bed, so far from peak form that if you watched through a hacked security camera at this moment you might barely recognize him, might at first confuse him with a Lebanese hostage. Then, in a swell of facial recognition, you'd realize: This is no ordinary shut-in watching television alone on a gigantic bed, and as the bloodred Netflix logo glared from an unseen TV you'd say, "I know this man, I've seen him on everything from billboards to breakfast cereals. He's the movie star: Jim Carrey."   Just weeks ago, thirty seconds of home security footage was leaked to The Hollywood Reporter by some traitor in his extended personal-protection apparatus. In it Carrey bobbed facedown and fetal in his pool, wailing underwater like a captive orca. His publicist, Sissy Bosch, told Variety that he was preparing to play John the Baptist for Terrence Malick, who conveniently declined comment. The video sold for fifty thousand dollars, a sum just large enough to inspire that most sacred of animal behaviors-- a spontaneous market response. After the fifth paparazzo scaled his backyard fence, his security team had it raised to fifteen feet, electrified, and fringed with razor wire, an eighty-five-thousand-dollar job including the city council bribe. Jim had since begun to hear the sizzles and squeaks of electrocuted wildlife as a sorrowful necessity, animal sacrifice to his godhead. And while some believed Sissy Bosch's John the Baptist story, most noted that it didn't explain Carrey's weight gain, or why some heard a distinctly Chinese accent in his moanings.   It was now 2:58 in the morning.   He'd been watching television for seven hours.   The binge had started with an episode of Ancient Predatorsfeaturing Megalodon, the super-shark terror of the ancient seas. Then came Cro-Magnon vs. Neanderthal, the story of how these early humans parted as cousins on the African plains, then re-met as strangers in Europe, only to begin a contest of genocide. Cro-Magnon had slaughtered without mercy, leaving famished Neanderthal orphans staring out from French caves into a blizzard, whose screaming whiteness, Jim knew, was that of total erasure. He was half French Canadian and learned from the narrator that he carried Neanderthal DNA within him; he was descended from these orphans. Feeling their doom as his own, he'd begun crying tears of desolation and then, unable to bear these, he'd hit pause with his grease-slicked thumb, freezing the screen on the tiny Neanderthal faces. For ten minutes he lay trembling, muttering "Oh God..." over and over until Netflix, greedy for its own bandwidth, reset to the main menu, casting its red glow over him and his guard dogs--identical twin, steel-toothed Rottweilers who both answered to "Jophiel." Their name was shared for the sake of efficiency in emergency, so that if one of Jim Carrey's many enemies broke into the house and he had only seconds to act, he could summon both with a breath.   Fearing this was the moment when he would discover his own long-standing nonexistence, questioning even the value of an existence as part of a species forever looping between horror and heartache, he wondered if the latest viral news story vexing his publicists was right. Had he actually died while snowboarding in Zermatt? He'd seen a YouTube video about how time behaves strangely in death, your final seconds distending, yielding rich washes of experience. What if he had died in recent days, arriving not in a hell or a heaven but rather a bedbound purgatory?   He'd heard stories about the Los Angeles morgue. Bored attendants taking gross pictures of the famous fallen, selling them to TMZ for down payments on houses in the Valley. He flipped to YouTube, whose algorithms, like reading his mind, offered a montage of celebrity death photos. A shot of John Lennon. Face puddled on a gurney. Splayed out for the crowd. If they could do this to John Lennon...   His mind now conjured an image of his own lifeless form, swollen and foul, the morgue goons standing above him, cameras blazing.   "Fuck...," he breathed, unsure if he'd breathed it or not.   He'd gone to the bathroom, trying to reclaim existential certainty with a warm rush of urine through his middle-aged urethra. His heart was racing. What if it failed in his sleep and they found him in the morning, caked in his own excrement? What if the entire flight of paranoia that had brought him to this moment of feared death was a premonition of a future death, the Zermatt snowboarding disaster just fate's deft misdirection? No, if death should come, he'd look his best--crevice as clean as a whistle.   Thus resolved, he'd sat on his Japanese toilet and evacuated his bowels, wiped himself, and hopped in the shower, thoroughly sponging the orifice, then drying and powdering himself. He moved to the vanity mirror and kept going, trimming his wiry eyebrows, plucking the wolf hairs from his ears, rubbing bronzer across his forehead, his neck, around his clavicles in a broad swoop, so he looked like a Grecian bust.   Now he was ready for the boys at the morgue.   Here was a great star, they'd say. A box-office god of the kind they don't make anymore.   Now he was marginally less afraid.   He settled back into bed and began watching the first thing Netflix offered: Pompeii Reconstructed: Countdown to Disaster.   "This was the Hamptons or Riviera of the ancient world," said the host, Ted Berman, an off-brand Indiana Jones in a thrift-store fedora. Once again, Jim felt reality blurring into fiction as a digitally animated cloud of burning ash billowed up from Mount Vesuvius, the computerized notion of a camera's POV rose with it, high above the city, then stopped and panned into the volcanic crater, which suddenly seemed so very endless and all-devouring that Carrey cried out, "Security inventory!"   "Internal zones clear," replied his house, in the voice of a Singaporean opium heiress who summered in Provence. "You are safe, Jim Carrey."   "Defense barrier status?"   "Fully electrified."   "Let's do a voltage surge. Just to be sure."   The television's light dimmed as he heard a sound like a giant zipper being pulled around the property, twenty thou-sand volts of electricity surging through his razor-wire fence.   "Tell me I'm safe again," said Carrey. "And loved."   "You are safe. And loved."   "Tell me something nice about me."   "Your monthly water usage is down three percent."   "Flatterer."   The television regained brightness. The program resumed.   An earthquake had just rocked Pompeii, a natural phenomenon that the Romans had never experienced. Some thought it was the first act of a miracle and stayed to see more. Others were less sure, fleeing through the city gates.   "No one could have guessed," said Ted Berman, "that all who remained would die."   A succession of desperate moments with the documentary's main characters: a shipping magnate and his pregnant wife; young sisters born into a brothel; a high-ranking magistrate, his family, and their African slave.   Eyes tearing, Jim wondered: Was it wise to keep watching Pompeii, with the images of megalodons still fresh on the brain? With those Neanderthal orphans still paused in their French cave? Charlie Kaufman once told him that cinema's guiding illusion of distinct frames effecting fluid continuity was the same trick that creates the impression of time in the mind-- that past and present are invented concepts, necessary fictions. Were he and the Pompeians just disparate squares of celluloid? Were they feeling the collapse of his world just as he was feeling the destruction of theirs? Was there only one pain? If this was true, then it must hold not only for the original Pompeians but for the actors playing them, people struggling for the next job.   To be seen. To matter.   Money was in charge now. Money had made them all indentured dreamers.   I don't have to be like this . . . Excerpted from Memoirs and Misinformation: A Novel by Jim Carrey, Dana Vachon All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.