Thanks for waiting The joy (& weirdness) of being a late bloomer

Doree Shafrir

Book - 2021

"An honest, witty, and insightful memoir about what happens when your coming-of-age comes later than expected, from the co-host of the hit podcast Forever35. Doree Shafrir was one of Gawker's early hires and one of the first editors at BuzzFeed; at both sites, she authored countless viral articles. Just before she turned forty, she published her first novel, and one year later, she quit her journalism career and co-launched Forever35, a wildly successful self-care podcast. Despite all of her success, Doree thinks of herself as a late bloomer, often out of sync with her various cohorts. She was the Gen Xer at the tech startup who refused to wear the unicorn onesie. She met her husband on Tinder in her late thirties, after many of h...er friends had already gotten married, started families, and entered couples' counseling. After a long fertility struggle, she is now a first-time mom on the other side of forty. Ditto starting her own small business. Now, in her debut memoir, Doree explores the enormous pressures we feel, especially as women, to hit certain milestones at certain times and how we can redefine what it means to be a late bloomer. She writes about everything from dating to infertility, to how friendships evolve as you get older, to why being pregnant at forty-one is unexpectedly freeing--all with the goal of appreciating the lives we've lived so far and the lives we still hope to live. Thanks for Waiting is about how achieving the milestones you thought were so important don't always happen on the timeline you imagined. In a world of 30 Under 30 lists, this book is a welcome reminder that it's okay to live life at your own speed"--

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BIOGRAPHY/Shafrir, Doree
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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Ballantine Books [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Doree Shafrir (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xi, 284 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780593156742
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Shafrir (Startup), a former BuzzFeed editor and cohost of the Forever35 podcast, delivers a heartwarming and witty account of how she figured it out--"whatever 'it' is"--on her own terms. "On the night I turned thirty," she writes, "I was... drunk on cheap beer and too-strong vodka sodas in plastic cups." Shafrir's peers, on the other hand, were already solidly on the path to "Real Adult Life," going to bed early and getting married "at the stroke of twenty-seven." In a culture obsessed with milestones, Shafrir struggled with feeling left behind. But rather than mourning what some may deem a squandered youth, she looks back fondly on her "late" arrival to professional success, marriage, and motherhood. She reflects on working in media in the mid-aughts as a 29-year-old intern, navigating Tinder in her 30s, becoming one of BuzzFeed's first editors at age 35 ("the Rubicon that, once crossed, women shriveled up and became crones living forgotten and alone"), and eventually getting married at age 38 and having a kid three years later. While Shafrir's droll sarcasm is perfectly calibrated, it's her vulnerability and writing about more difficult experiences--such as her struggle with infertility--that will keep readers rapt. This coming-of-age story raises the bar. (June)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A former journalist and current podcaster narrates a life lived slightly behind the curve. Reading through the first part of Shafrir's memoir, it seems like she may have buried the lede. However, after motoring pleasantly along through the early chapters, it becomes apparent that it just wasn't very attention-getting. As the subtitle notes, the author considers herself a late bloomer. "I got married at thirty-eight, had my first kid at forty-one, and undoubtedly will be renting in the very overpriced city of Los Angeles until the end of time," she writes. To many readers, this supposed milestone-missing will not seem to be such a big deal, especially considering Shafrir's many career successes before getting married. After college and graduate school, she worked as a journalist at Gawker, the New York Observer, BuzzFeed, and Rolling Stone. Before she turned 40, she was a published novelist and a successful podcaster (Forever 35). In her 20s and 30s, she had a series of long- and short-term relationships, which she narrates with feeling and candor. Later, Shafrir chronicles how she met a nice stand-up comic, got married, and confronted infertility. She and her husband now co-host a podcast called Matt and Doree's Eggcellent Adventure, which they launched in 2016 "a few weeks before my first embryo transfer." Shafrir's debut novel, Startup (2017), was a fun read, and this book includes a description of her writing process for the novel. A friend recommended she make a "beat sheet" to help her find "where the pacing felt flabby and where I needed to put in more plot elements." This worked well for Startup, less well here--though Shafrir may be lucky that she avoided a tragedy or excess of trauma that might jazz up her story. The author's engaging writing style and persona can't quite make up for the ho-hum material. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One It was the beginning of June 2009, and maybe the only surprising thing about the layoffs was that they hadn't happened sooner. The economy had tanked the previous fall, the United States was now officially in a recession, and The New York Observer, the newspaper where I'd worked for almost two years, was struggling. Its longtime editor, Peter Kaplan, had just quit, and the rumor was that he had chosen this moment to leave because he knew layoffs were imminent and he couldn't bring himself to execute them. The morning of the layoffs, I went into work with a creeping sense of dread. Peter's replacement was his deputy, Tom, whom I didn't have an especially close relationship with, and I worried that as he had made up the list of who would stay and who would go, I was on it. What would I do if I got laid off? I was thirty-­two--­not old, certainly, but old enough that I was no longer a cheap hire. And besides, we were officially in the worst recession since the Great Depression. "They're calling people into Peter's old office," I Gchatted my boyfriend, Jon. "I just don't have a good feeling about this." "Whatever happens, we'll figure it out," he responded. But I didn't want to "figure it out." I wanted to keep my job--­not just because getting fired in the middle of a recession is not exactly ideal, but also because getting hired at the Observer had been a dream come true. When I was in college in Philadelphia, I had become obsessed with the paper, an oversized, salmon-­colored weekly (Henry Rollins, perhaps apocryphally, had once called it "the curiously pink newspaper") where Candace Bushnell had written the "Sex and the City" column that had become the TV show. The paper, written in a droll, knowing, literary style, portrayed an alluring New York of socialites and magazine editors and hedge funders. I wasn't interested in actually being one of the people they wrote about--­I wanted to chronicle and interpret this world, as a kind of Harriet the Spy of exclusive New York. I got to write about pretty much anything I wanted: profiles of intense and weird politicians like Anthony Weiner, columns about what it was like when your deadbeat boyfriend got his life together after you broke up, trend stories about nerds who were actually jocks. Since I was a kid growing up outside of Boston I'd always been enamored with New York--­for my fourteenth birthday, my mom and I drove to Manhattan and had lunch at the Rainbow Room in Rockefeller Center, which I thought was the height of sophistication; it felt like being literally on top of the world. Now, thanks to my job, I had been given the keys to a New York world that felt exciting and exclusive, and, often, borderline absurd, like a party for a line of wine-­related clothing accessories hosted by 60 Minutes host Lesley Stahl (yes, this was an actual event that occurred). Most of my friends worked in media, too, and even though the scene could sometimes feel claustrophobic--­you did tend to see the same faces at the book parties and the dinners and the launch events--­it was also satisfying to feel like I had made it. But even outside of work, I just loved existing in the city. Everything was here, and I got to be a part of it. I'd gotten the job a couple of summers earlier, when Peter, then the editor in chief, had emailed me to ask if I wanted to get coffee. At the time, I was working for the media gossip blog Gawker. Peter was a legend in New York media; it felt like I'd been summoned by the literary gods. He was known for hiring the best young reporters, writing the snappiest headlines, producing a must-­read paper each week on a shoestring budget. I was dying to work for him. "So how are things going over there?" he had asked when we sat down at Friend of a Farmer, a café down the street from the Observer office. He was wearing his trademark tortoiseshell glasses and a loosened tie, and khakis. His hair was graying, but he had a full head of it. The overall effect was rumpled professor. "Well, Choire is a genius," I said, not really answering the question. Choire was Choire Sicha, the editor in chief of Gawker, who had left the Observer to take the Gawker job; he had previously left an earlier stint at Gawker to take the job at the Observer. He and Peter were still close. It was all very incestuous. Was Peter trying to get back at Choire for leaving by hiring me? And if he was, did it matter? I liked working for Choire, but I didn't feel any particular loyalty to Gawker, which was a notoriously difficult place to work, and after less than a year there I was already feeling burned-­out. Still, I was mindful of performing the delicate dance of signaling my interest in a job, while not trashing my current employer, while also not wanting to appear desperate. "Well, listen," Peter said, after we'd sipped our coffees and chatted for half an hour or so. "You've been doing terrific stuff with Choire. But--­I think you should come to the Observer. " I tried to keep my face looking pleased but not overly excited. "What kind of job are you thinking?" "I'd put you on the 'Ideas' beat," he said. "Literary stuff, academia, the intellectual scene in New York. You'd have a lot of freedom. Think about it, okay?" "I will," I said. "Before we go, I do have a question--­I know most of the reporters are, like, twenty-­four. I don't mean to put this indelicately, but can you afford me?" Although I wasn't making a ton of money at Gawker, I was making more than twenty-­two thousand dollars a year, which was what I had heard was the starting salary for Observer reporters. There was no way I'd be able to survive on that in New York--­I didn't have a trust fund or family help, and I couldn't stomach the idea of going back to live in a crappy apartment with multiple roommates just to take this job. Peter seemed embarrassed at the mere mention of money. "I think I can work it out, yes," he said. I started a couple of months later. I was one of the older reporters in the bullpen, but it felt like I was finally where I was supposed to be. And then, in the fall of 2008, after I'd been at the paper for a little over a year, the economy crashed. The papers ran photo after photo of shell-­shocked Lehman Brothers analysts leaving their offices with their company gym bags after they had learned the company would be shutting down. At first, it felt surreal: Surely the whole economy wasn't crashing? At the paper, we published a piece about "Crash Virgins," aka people who had never been through an economic crash before. But clearly, the economic crisis was running much deeper than just being a cute trend story. We just didn't yet know how deep, or how our lives would change. The owner of the paper, Jared Kushner, the son of a disgraced New Jersey real estate magnate, long had been an infrequent but anxiety-­producing visitor at work. But now he seemed to be showing up more often, wandering around the office and stressing everyone out, especially Peter. By January, the parties dried up, even more so than the usual post-­holiday-­party slump. Things at the paper were also getting more dire financially. Advertising was way down, and the shoestring budget that we'd been operating on got even more shoestring. I was now editing the paper's social column, "The Transom," but the paper's freelance and expenses budgets were slashed. I had to make the case for why my one remaining reporter should be reimbursed for the cabs she took home late at night from covering the few parties that were still happening. Still, even now, months into the crash, I wasn't overly concerned; the Observer had always operated on a shoestring budget, and I was confident that this, too, would pass. But it didn't. And then Peter announced he was leaving, and there was a big farewell party at Elaine's, the Upper East Side bar and restaurant that had been a longtime gathering spot of a certain milieu of literary New York; it was festive but melancholy. The next day, people started getting called in to Tom's office. Excerpted from Thanks for Waiting: The Joy (& Weirdness) of Being a Late Bloomer by Doree Shafrir 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.