"In this collection of sharp recollections, Jordan details his life growing up as a church-going boy outside of Chattanooga to misadventures in drag to moving to Los Angeles in the midst of the AIDS crisis. He is, in every sense, fierce, a hilarious storyteller who makes the mundane seem magical and a staunch advocate for the LGBTQ community... This breezy collection will appeal to readers of pop culture, celebrity memoirs, and Southern storytelling." — Booklist
“Hilarious . . . highly entertaining . . . With a whole lot of heart and even more laughs, Jordan captures his personality perfectly on the page.” — The Nerd Daily
"In this collection of sharp recollections, Jordan details his life growing up as a church-going boy outside of Chattanooga to misadventures in drag to moving to Los Angeles in the midst of the AIDS crisis. He is, in every sense, fierce, a hilarious storyteller who makes the mundane seem magical and a staunch advocate for the LGBTQ community... This breezy collection will appeal to readers of pop culture, celebrity memoirs, and Southern storytelling."
Hilarious . . . highly entertaining . . . With a whole lot of heart and even more laughs, Jordan captures his personality perfectly on the page.”
"In this collection of sharp recollections, Jordan details his life growing up as a church-going boy outside of Chattanooga to misadventures in drag to moving to Los Angeles in the midst of the AIDS crisis. He is, in every sense, fierce, a hilarious storyteller who makes the mundane seem magical and a staunch advocate for the LGBTQ community... This breezy collection will appeal to readers of pop culture, celebrity memoirs, and Southern storytelling."
12/01/2020
Famous for breaking the Watergate story with Bob Woodward, Bernstein backtracks to his early-1960s experiences as a teenage reporter at the Washington Star in Chasing History. Structured around Gwendolyn Brooks's "We Real Cool," Punch Me Up to the Gods recounts award-winning poet/screenwriter Broom's upbringing in Ohio as a Black boy crushing on other boys, falling into wild sex and drug use, and finally finding his way. Laden with Academy Award, BAFTA, Golden Globe, SAG, and Grammy honors, Foxx pivots here to talk about raising two very different daughters in Act Like You Got Some Sense (400,000-copy first printing; originally scheduled for October 2020). In The Windsor Diaries, published posthumously, Howard records staying with her grandfather at Cumberland Lodge in Windsor Great Park during World War II and befriending princesses Elizabeth and Margaret. Emmy Award winner Leslie Jordan, a viral sensation, pulls out the Southern charm to tell funny stories about life and celebrity in How Y'all Doing? (100,000-copy first printing). Having started the YouTube channel Dad, How Do I? to hand out the fatherly advice and how-to tips he wishes his dad had been around to give him, Kenney here reiterates that advice while surveying his childhood and how the channel went viral (75,000-copy first printing). In Sparring with Smokin' Joe, Lewis, director of journalism at York College, CUNY, recalls the months he spent in 1981 in the gym and on the road with boxing great Joe Frazier. Brat Packer McCarthy relates a life that encompasses acting, directing, and working as an award-winning editor-at-large at National Geographic Traveler. In Sunshine Girl, Margulies shows how she created order amid the chaos of a difficult childhood to become an Emmy, Golden Globe, and Screen Actors Guild Award-winning actress. In Sinatra and Me, Oppedisano, a longtime confidant and key member of the singer's management team, reflects on Sinatra's life, loves, and commitment to his craft (100,000-copy first printing). Finally, in The Wreckage of My Presence, actress/podcaster Wilson offers funny but heartfelt essays ranging from the joys of eating in bed to her obsessive need to be liked (100,000-copy first printing)
From his opening line—”Well, shit, how y'all doing?”—Leslie Jordan brings his sparkling energy and humor to the narration of his memoir. The Tennessee native, who starred in television's “Will & Grace” and “American Horror Story,” has of late achieved a loyal social media following after going viral (a status he didn't even know the meaning of until it happened) on Instagram. Jordan narrates in his trademark Southern accent, with a delightfully whimsical and flamboyant touch. His colorful narration dovetails with his colorful life, which is on full display, from growing up gay in a Southern Baptist family in a conservative area to his struggles with drug and alcohol abuse and his later sobriety and successful career in the performing arts. S.E.G. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award, 2022 Audies Winner © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine
From his opening line—”Well, shit, how y'all doing?”—Leslie Jordan brings his sparkling energy and humor to the narration of his memoir. The Tennessee native, who starred in television's “Will & Grace” and “American Horror Story,” has of late achieved a loyal social media following after going viral (a status he didn't even know the meaning of until it happened) on Instagram. Jordan narrates in his trademark Southern accent, with a delightfully whimsical and flamboyant touch. His colorful narration dovetails with his colorful life, which is on full display, from growing up gay in a Southern Baptist family in a conservative area to his struggles with drug and alcohol abuse and his later sobriety and successful career in the performing arts. S.E.G. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award, 2022 Audies Winner © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine
2021-05-18
The actor and surprise Instagram phenomenon dishes on his career, his past, and his foibles.
Before the pandemic, Jordan was best known as a diminutive scene-stealer with supporting roles in Will and Grace, Boston Public, The Help, and American Horror Story. But as he relates early in this casual, good-natured memoir, his flirty and funny gay-uncle personality also made him a perfect fit for Instagram, which rewards colorful personalities who are quick with a zinger; he went from zero to 5.5 million followers in less than a year. Virality hasn’t gone to his head, though, and the prevailing mood here is one of humility and self-deprecation. He interweaves run-ins with the likes of Lady Gaga, Carrie Fisher, and Dolly Parton with recollections of his childhood in east Tennessee (where he fumbled to understand his sexuality), his early professional stumbles, and past addictions. Most of his stories are of the breezy, funny-incident variety—you can picture him relating them on a talk-show couch (or an Instagram video)—and his descriptions of other actors are unstintingly polite to the point of cliché. (Vicki Lawrence is “wonderfully loving, exceptionally talented”; Gaga was “beautifully brought up.”) But it’s not all fluff. In a chapter about Truman Capote, Jordan recalls how the author’s gay persona, after terrifying him at first, appealed to him and led to an ultimately disastrous effort to portray him onstage. A homophobic incident at his local Starbucks prompted him to recall his volunteer work with AIDS patients during the crisis. In the closing chapter, the author nicely balances a sweet and sour tone, venting his heartbreak at the Orlando Pulse shooting while relating his inexpert attempt to toss a first pitch at a baseball game shortly after.
A lightweight but inviting clutch of remembrances from an outsize personality.