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Dear Girls: Intimate Tales, Untold Secrets, and Advice for Living Your Best Life by Ali Wong
denimorse's review against another edition
4.0
This book is hilarious and wrong and definitely not safe for kids. It is written as letters to her daughters which i assume they should never actually read. Ali Wong is just one of the funniest women out there, and she leaves nothing out as she chronicles her life and her rise to fame. She does not sugar coat anything, she fought her way to the top of the pack through hard work, dedication and tough trade-offs. Definitely not safe for work.
jillybebe's review against another edition
1.0
Her 15 minutes are up. She is a one-note comedian— funny the first time you hear it, irritating the 15th time.
spcummings's review against another edition
5.0
The definitive version of Ali Wong's book? I'm pretty sure it's the audiobook version.
leashaloo's review against another edition
5.0
Book on tape- I loved being able to hear her voice read her book.
obsidian_blue's review against another edition
5.0
Not too much to say except I really loved this collection of essays by Ali Wong. I got to know a little bit more about her, her family, her husband, and how she started off in comedy. She manages to infuse her essays to her daughters with love, laughter, and sometimes tears. I did love how this collection ended with a letter from her husband to their daughters too. The family seems very tight-knit, slightly manic at times, but ready to pull a knife on you if you screw with one of their own.
I have to say that I found myself nodding along with Wong during parts of this essay to her daughters. I love what she had to say about marrying someone within their own culture and how it just makes things easier because you get things that someone else would not. I also loved her thoughts on traveling abroad to experience different people, countries, and food. All of the food mentioned in this book made me ridiculously hungry too by the way. When I traveled through Indonesia, Sri Lanka, and Hong Kong years ago it felt like I finally came home. I ate everything I could and just went for whatever was put in front of me. I finally found countries that actually cooked food so hot it made the heat travel up through my ears. I was in heaven.
Wong of course goes into how she met her now husband, how things were not perfect, still are not perfect, but they loved each other. It's also wonderful to see how she handles being the "breadmaker" in the family while he does things that are typically assigned to women. I think in America we still have that problem with men that stay at home are looked down upon by not only other people, but within their own families. Somehow stay at home husbands are not manly enough or something. But we don't say a word about how women are not womenly enough if they stay at home.
Wong's family sounds completely chaotic and I loved the stories about her parents, her sisters, and her brother.
We also get such great insights into the comedy circuit and how she forced herself out there to play in front of audiences that were diverse in order to get better. If you just play in front of the same crowd of white men and women, how are you stretching yourself and growing?
Definitely would love to read another book from her in the future.
I have to say that I found myself nodding along with Wong during parts of this essay to her daughters. I love what she had to say about marrying someone within their own culture and how it just makes things easier because you get things that someone else would not. I also loved her thoughts on traveling abroad to experience different people, countries, and food. All of the food mentioned in this book made me ridiculously hungry too by the way. When I traveled through Indonesia, Sri Lanka, and Hong Kong years ago it felt like I finally came home. I ate everything I could and just went for whatever was put in front of me. I finally found countries that actually cooked food so hot it made the heat travel up through my ears. I was in heaven.
Wong of course goes into how she met her now husband, how things were not perfect, still are not perfect, but they loved each other. It's also wonderful to see how she handles being the "breadmaker" in the family while he does things that are typically assigned to women. I think in America we still have that problem with men that stay at home are looked down upon by not only other people, but within their own families. Somehow stay at home husbands are not manly enough or something. But we don't say a word about how women are not womenly enough if they stay at home.
Wong's family sounds completely chaotic and I loved the stories about her parents, her sisters, and her brother.
We also get such great insights into the comedy circuit and how she forced herself out there to play in front of audiences that were diverse in order to get better. If you just play in front of the same crowd of white men and women, how are you stretching yourself and growing?
Definitely would love to read another book from her in the future.