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"You're Not That Pretty" & Other Things My Parents Told Me: Stories from the chaos
Contributor(s): Kasper, Debbie (Author)
ISBN:     ISBN-13: 9798663525817
Publisher: Independently Published
OUR PRICE:   $13.29  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: July 2020
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Family & Relationships | Dysfunctional Families
- Humor | Form - Essays
Physical Information: 0.61" H x 5.51" W x 8.5" (0.75 lbs) 292 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

This memoir (of sorts) slips 'n slides from the fifties on up to the nineties in a few dozen bizarrely true tales, by award-winning and Emmy-nominated comedy writer, Debbie Kasper, who has already been hailed "a female David Sedaris." A deliciously honest memoir splattered with so many scathing family secrets, that she had to wait for some people to die to even write it.

Her collection of acerbic, hilarious, sometimes poignant tales drops us smack into the middle of the fifties & sixties, inside the chaotic Kasper house--a home where bourbon rules, hamsters roam freely, and sanity runs scared. Debbie's parents smoke and drink like they only have a day to live, spewing out twisted advice like, "Don't have children, you'll just end up hating half of them." Debbie scythes her way through the suburban jungle of three brothers who dangle snakes in her face, hide mice in her bras, jump out of second story windows, crack open fish tanks and eventually set the place on fire. During the Summer of Love, Debbie's parents throw their kids a surprise half-sister, just in time to watch her go mad. Then she stampedes through the sixties, seventies and eighties armed with terrible parental advice and a drinking problem all her own.

Her adventures include: getting involved in a Mafia hit, being terrorized by Jersey Diner waitresses at her first job, and missing the moon landing altogether--thinking there'd be other chances. She gets busted at the German border, caught shoplifting dressed as a clown, misses her chance to marry Billy Joel, and is at a comedy gig the night a stabbed transvestite hooker bleeds to death knocking on her NYC apartment door.

The stories are wild, but it's her ironic perspective, relentless humor, and indomitable spirit that steer the pages of this hilariously self-effacing and provocative memoir. "You're Not that Pretty," is also a bit of a reunion for baby boomers--one that you don't have to drop twenty pounds to go to.