Skip to main content

This Will Only Hurt a Little by Busy Philipps

Busy Philipps is a sparkly force of nature.

I started this one on Kindle, and eventually switched over to audiobook to listen on my commute, and WHOA am I ever glad I did. Busy does so many fantastic impressions of the people she's writing about on the audiobook, and she nails it every time. Her Michelle Williams is spot on. Even the two lines she says as Katie Holmes: perfection. And I'm sure her mother sounds exactly the way Busy does on that recording as well. You get the picture.

Busy isn't someone I knew much about, but remembered as a fixture kind of background character from a lot of things, like Dawson's Creek. Now that I go back and watch things she's done— she's completely right, she is sparkly and entertaining to watch. I found this book to be so well-written, human, open and vulnerable. She didn't hold back on what she really thinks of certain people *cough* I did not find James Franco's d-bagness to be shocking to say the least *cough* and I was impressed at her boldness and courage in sharing the challenges in her most important relationships.

Also, did you know that Busy was the one who came up with the idea of the Blades of Glory movie starring Will Ferrell on ice skates? Well, now you do!

I'd read anything Busy puts out again, even if it's a grocery list. Big new fan over here.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Younger Wife by Sally Hepworth

Photo by Tiko Giorgadze on Unsplash Thank you to NetGalley and St Martin's Press for the opportunity to read and review an advanced reader's copy of this book. The Younger Wife was a satisfying, fast-paced romp of a read. Sally Hepworth has become a reliable favourite for books that I can't put down! She has a way of writing dark subjects lightly, and her characters are always richly developed, full of flaws and quirks— which I love. I find with her writing, I never quite know how things will turn out in the end, and The Younger Wife was no exception.  The book is told from the perspectives of Tully and Rachel, two adult sisters, as well as from the perspective of their father's new fiancĂ©, Heather. Tully and Rachel's mother has dementia and is in a nursing home, so understandably, their father, Stephen, wants to move forward with life and has found love with Heather, who is notably younger than him, which doesn't sit well with the sisters. I found the characte...

Oh My God, What a Complete Aisling by Emer McLysaght and Sarah Breen

  I haven't been so utterly besotted with a character as I was with Aisling in a very, very long time. I also think this audiobook may have broken some records on the number of times it made me snort laugh out loud with the endless Irish-isms, and the genuine hilarious earnestness of our dear Aisling.  It's no secret that I love/am fairly obsessed with any and everything Irish. I'm Canadian as can be, but my paternal grandmother has roots in Ireland (and shared many of the cultural perspectives that came up in this book for the country folk, it turns out), and my mother's grandmother had family from Northern Ireland, I think. Anyway, like I said, I'm Canadian af, and so are my parents and their parents, so I'm certainly not claiming citizenship here or something. But I do think some very old family traits and traditions have made it down the line to the things we still find ourselves doing today. Additionally, many of my fond memories are due to a tiny, spritel...

The Midnight Library and Midnight at the Bright Ideas Bookstore

I love Dolly Parton. For so many reasons, including that she's a badass feminist with a massive heart of gold who has contributed to kid's literacy among other charitable causes, including contributing to funding of the Moderna vaccine. Oh, and her incredible musical catalogue, of course. But this story only about Dolly peripherally. Recently, Dolly did an interview with the NY Times , and she mentioned that she's been reading a book called The Midnight Library by Matt Haig. Unless you've been living under a rock, you'll have heard of this book as it's on all the lists this year. It's about a 35 year old woman called Nora Seed whose life is just not working out the way she hoped it would — in any area at all. She decides it's time to end things, and after she tries to do so, she finds herself in a place between life and death called The Midnight Library where her childhood library explains that she can try on different versions of her life to see what w...