Legitimate kid A memoir

Aida Rodriguez

Book - 2023

Rodriguez, now a stand-up comedian, has been kidnapped (twice, by family), lived through a difficult marriage, and suffered homelessness with her children in Los Angeles. But through it all she never lost her sense of humor. Here Rodriguez turns tragedy and pain into comedy, charting her many ups and downs in life. Her book is endearing, shocking, and ultimately life-affirming. -- adapted from jacket

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BIOGRAPHY/Rodriguez, Aida
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Subjects
Genres
autobiographies (literary works)
Biographies
Autobiographies
Published
New York, NY : HarperOne, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Aida Rodriguez (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xvi, 238 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780063241282
  • Foreword
  • Introduction
  • Part I. Cocoon
  • Legitimacy
  • Pedro
  • Pizza and Penis
  • China and Black and the Green Machine
  • Sarnosa
  • Your Mama Is a Ho!
  • The Witness
  • Carlos
  • El Día del Pavo
  • Istata and Pachew
  • Fuck the Law, Break the Kids
  • What's for Lunch?
  • Part II. Metamorphosis
  • The Great Debater
  • Baby Daddy
  • Richard
  • El Sapo y La Vaca
  • I Chose Violence
  • Señorita Gone Wild
  • Smells Like Teen Parents
  • Dumb Bitch
  • The Draft
  • Phone Boning
  • The Mother of It All
  • Bendición, Papi
  • Raymond
  • The Odd One Out
  • Part III. Wings
  • Put Some Respect on Akaylah's Name
  • Thomas Crown-ish
  • Strike
  • Breaking News
  • The Artist Formerly Known as Daddy
  • The Best, Best Man
  • Part IV. Flight
  • You Can't Handle the Truth
  • The Village People
  • Davie
  • Name Dropping
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A comedian and actor reckons with a lifetime of familial heartache. Instead of packing the book with humor, Rodriguez largely details somber, even harrowing experiences. "I am grieving my losses, feeling my own pain, giving myself grace, and understanding why I operate the way I do," she writes. The author focuses her nonlinear narrative around her long alienation from her absent father and her extremely difficult childhood. "I didn't know how bad it was," she writes, "until we were so broke that we had to go out and beg for food." She describes being molested by her mother's boyfriend, before being sent to live with other relatives. "My mother was a young mom and she did a lot of things wrong," writes the author. "She didn't know better." When Rodriguez became pregnant as a teenager, her mother beat her with a belt and pressured her to have an abortion. She chronicles how a divorce served as an impetus for her move to Los Angeles, and she candidly delineates a series of tribulations, including a tumultuous five-year relationship. A few years ago, the author met her father for the first time, and she "felt like a fool" when he asked for money. Refreshingly, Rodriguez opts for compassion, forgiveness, and gratitude. Only the final chapter chronicles getting her start as a comedian. "Stand-up comedy gave me the voice I never thought I had," she writes. "After spending my life searching for validation, it became the place where I found it." In 2013, she got her first real break, as a finalist on Last Comic Standing, after which she "became a full-time comic." The author's resilience is undeniable, but the narrative is often disjointed and repetitive, demonstrating that she is still finding her voice as a writer. A genuine memoir that suffers from a lack of organization. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.