I'll have what she's having

Chelsea Handler

Book - 2025

"At ten years old, Chelsea opened a lemonade stand and realized she'd make more money if the drinks were spiked. So she added vodka to her recipe and used her earnings to upgrade herself to first-class on a family vacation-leaving her parents and siblings in coach. At nineteen, she moved to Los Angeles and got fired from her temp job when she admitted she didn't know how to transfer calls. She played pickleball with the scions of an American dynasty. She sexted a governor. She shared psychedelics with strangers in Spain. When she accidentally ended up at dinner with Woody Allen, she decided she wouldn't leave the table without asking him a very pointed personal question. She went on national television and talked about h...aving threesomes. Chelsea Handler has never been one to hold back. But this life of adventure and absurdity is only part of her story. Chelsea's truest calling is showing up for her family-canine and human, biological and chosen. She's come to embrace spending time with herself, meditating, remaining open to love, and ending relationships with grace when that's what's called for. She is a sister to the many women who rely on her"--

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BIOGRAPHY/Handler, Chelsea
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2nd Floor New Shelf BIOGRAPHY/Handler, Chelsea (NEW SHELF) Due Apr 11, 2025
2nd Floor New Shelf BIOGRAPHY/Handler, Chelsea (NEW SHELF) Due Apr 24, 2025
2nd Floor New Shelf BIOGRAPHY/Handler, Chelsea (NEW SHELF) Due Apr 27, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Humor
Published
New York : The Dial Press 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Chelsea Handler (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xii, 299 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780593596579
  • Little Girl
  • Hard Lemonade
  • First Class
  • Cross-Country Chicanery
  • Temporary Employment
  • Montreal Comedy Bomb
  • Jane Fonda
  • Now What?
  • Woman Up
  • The Beginning of the Beginning
  • Cuomo You Don't
  • To All My Nuggets
  • Maine
  • Maine Part Deux
  • Apres, Anyone?
  • Looking for Love?
  • Mountain Woman
  • Skiing with the Elderly
  • Angela Shoniker
  • Poopsie, Whoopsie, and Oopsie
  • De Facto Parenting
  • Wisdom 2.0
  • Public Love
  • Breaking Apart
  • Girls Behaving Badly
  • Healing Through
  • Desperate Times
  • Travelogues
  • Sunny Side Up
  • My Man
  • Dependable, Kind, Munificent, Free
  • Baby on Board
  • Woman King
  • Katelyn
  • Road Trip
  • Boundaries
  • Showing Up
  • Woody Allen
  • The Trouble with Men
  • Exes and My Big Mouth
  • Mallorca is the Tits
  • 360 Review
  • Allee of Trees
  • Doug Handler
  • Spring Break
  • Ebullience
  • Won't You Be My Neighbor?
  • Full Circle
  • Woman
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The comic and television personality turns serious--semi-serious, anyway--in a combination memoir and self-help book. Handler opens these generally short essays with a memory of childhood that closes with the exhortation to keep the child within us alive into adulthood: "Hold on to that child tightly, as if she were your own, because she is." The memory soon veers into the comically absurd, with an account of a cocaine-fueled cross-country trip with a random companion who looked like another TV personality: "I don't know if Dog the Bounty Hunter does copious amounts of cocaine, but he sure looks like he does." Drugs and juice are seldom far from the proceedings, but therapy is close by, too, and clearly the latter has been of tremendous use, if "exhausting in the sense that every new development or idea led to a period of intense self-awareness followed by waves of acute self-consciousness coupled with endless self-recrimination." As the anecdotes progress, that intense self-awareness becomes less fraught. Some of her life lessons are drawn from her experiences wrestling with the yips and setbacks of performing before audiences; some turn into knowing one-liners ("I knew if three men in a row told me not to do something, it was imperative that I do the opposite"). Most, even if tongue-in-cheek or rueful, are delivered with a disarming friendliness laced with her trademark archness: Her account of a dinner opposite Woody Allen and daughter/wife Soon-Yi is worth the price of admission alone. In the main, Handler is a cheerleader for everyone worthy of cheers, and especially women. As she writes, encouragingly, "You have misbehaved, and then corrected, and then misbehaved again, and then corrected some more"--and have grown and flourished. A pleasingly unformulaic book of hard-won advice that never rings false. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.