I want to be where the normal people are

Rachel Bloom, 1987-

Book - 2020

The star of "Crazy Ex-Girlfriend" collects essays, poems, and other personal creations to explore such subjects as her perceptions of "normal," struggles with depression, and life-shaping female friendships.

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Humor
Essays
Poetry
Published
New York : Grand Central Publishing 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Rachel Bloom, 1987- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
282 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781538745359
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Bloom, co-creator and star of the TV show Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, has never been normal. She's obsessed with musical theater and poop. As a child, she wanted to fit in, but also didn't want to be like the Tiffanys and Gaskins who bullied her through middle school. In her memoir, she relates the social and mental-health struggles that plagued her and made her who she is, including a not-quite-diagnosed OCD that manifests itself in bouts of intrusive, obsessive thoughts. She also shares romantic foibles, with insufferable SMIMT (straight men in musical theater) and competitive comedy bros, which led her to realize that her ideal man is Ray Bradbury and to create her first viral musical sensation, "Fuck Me, Ray Bradbury." With whip-smart candor and disarming energy, Bloom writes pieces that range in form from confessional essays to a time-travel play to a pop quiz about a lion attack to a contribution from her dog, Wiley, and each captures the infectious, frantic, and very funny voice of a grown-up theater-kid weirdo. Fans of her show and former and current nerds of all stripes will see themselves in Bloom's story.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: The end of Crazy Ex-Girlfriend has not dulled its fans' enthusiasm, and, really, anyone who made it out of adolescence alive will appreciate Bloom's insights.Women in Focus: The 19th in 2020

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

Actor and Emmy winner Bloom combines irreverent humor with childhood journal entries in this entertaining essay collection. The cocreator of TV show My Crazy Ex Girlfriend traces her search to feel "normal" back to middle school, when she was "pretty insufferable" and also the victim of bullies. Bloom's humor, however, survived, and can be appreciated in amusing notes to her therapist, her journal entries (such as a list of all the "bad words" she knew at age 12), and a reprint of a high school newspaper editorial she wrote titled "Inside Jokes Can Leave Many Outside." In an "interview" conducted by her 13-year-old self, Bloom captures her experience working as the sole woman in male-dominated writers' rooms, telling teen-Bloom that "a few of them are SO funny that I often can't even get a word in." She recaps her rapid success (My Crazy Ex-Girlfriend was ordered for series "blindingly fast"), and while a few of her bits fall short--in "My Official Celebrity Cause," she writes that it's important for stars to use their platform to speak out on issues; hers is "amusement parks should be smarter"--many of her reflections are spot-on. Fans of My Crazy Ex Girlfriend will want to give this a look. (Nov.)

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

Crazy Ex-Girlfriend creator Bloom offers burst-out-loud-laughing personal essays that explore feeling uncomfortably different from others and finally realizing that she's not (200,000-copy first printing). Back to the Future Fox focuses on issues of hope, fear, toughness, and being realistic as he explains his struggles with Parkinson's and spinal-cord surgery that led to his learning to walk again in No Time Like the Future (350,00-copy first printing). What long-running TV show, now moving from strictly syndication to streaming, is the subject of McNear's Answers in the Form of Questions (60,000-copy first printing)? From Maerz, founding editor of New York magazine's Vulture website, Alright, Alright, Alright shows how Richard Linklater's Dazed and Confused proved to be an unexpected success and the making of stars like Matthew McConaughey, Parker Posey, and Ben Affleck (75,000-copy first printing). And New York Post theater columnist Riedel ranges from Jonathan Larsen's Rent to Disney's The Lion King as he portrays recent Midas-touched Broadway theater in Singular Sensation (100,000-copy first printing).

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

The co-creator and star of Crazy Ex-Girlfriend talks about her life. "By the time I turned thirty," writes Bloom, "I should have understood that there was no such thing as 'normal.' " In this offbeat compendium of personal moments from childhood to the present, the author shares her journey in search of that moment when she felt "normal" around other people. Among other topics, Bloom discusses her mental health issues as an adolescent and how she endured bullying during middle school: "Were you bullied in middle school? Yeah? You were? Bullshit. You weren't bullied. I was bullied. I am the ultimate judge of bullying and I conclude that I was bullied and you were not bullied. So says me, court adjourned, gavel goes bang bang." The author's humor is more pointed in her assessment of the pros and cons of attending award shows (her personal review system "is based on the things that TRULY count: Food, Parking, Temperature in the Room, and How Much Shapewear Is Expected"), a chapter in which she writes in the voice of her dog, and a section about how she and her colleagues bypassed FCC regulations to make certain parts of Crazy Ex-Girlfriend acceptable for a broadcast network rather than "edgy cable" (developed for Showtime, the series landed with the CW). Bloom includes childhood diary entries, poetry, and drawings as well as a snarky sample resume for aspiring actors, and she maintains a certain diffident note as she rambles along. The book was written before the pandemic, when the idea of "normal" was still possible. Thankfully, the author shares a relevant afterword that helps balance the silliness and eccentricities of the scattered narrative. Fans of the TV show will enjoy learning the backstory about the creator and star, but general readers won't find much to appeal here. Bloom's comedic talent doesn't translate to the page--at least not yet. Check back as her career continues to mature. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.