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  • Bossypants
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Customer reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
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Bossypants

Bossypants

byTina Fey
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Top positive review

Positive reviews›
Patricia Bridge
5.0 out of 5 starslove, career
Reviewed in the United States on December 7, 2017
In this humorous memoir, Tina Fey writes about a plethora of topics and stories, all the way from her childhood in Pennsylvania, to her starting her comedy career in Chicago, to her success all over the world. By telling her own stories with witty commentary, Fey also provides a lot of advice about femininity, love, career, and growing up. It is incredibly engaging right off the bat. The cover of the book pictures Fey with a suit, tie, bowler hat, and two large male hands holding her head up. This gives the reader a good idea of the central themes of the book. Fey is one of the most prominent females in the industry, and was a pioneer for women in comedy. The cover is not only humorous, but can be considered commentary about how she is in a very male dominated field. Even the title, “bossypants” is a funny yet accurate representation of Fey’s life. Fey also does a good job of engaging the reader with the first page. With the first line reading “welcome friend”, Fey establishes a very casual tone that makes you feel as if she is a dear companion or an older sister writing to you. She cracks a few jokes, asking the reader why they bought the book. This also says a lot about the structure of “Bossypants”. It is not organized in a way that is especially formal, which to me, makes it easier and more enjoyable to read.
There is not so much a “plot” as much as there’s a progression of stories, all told with a unique voice and moral. The stories progress from childhood to professional, which lets readers find different ways to identify with Fey, making the book relatable for many different kinds of people. That’s one of the things I liked most about the book. As a woman, one of the best pieces in the book was the commentary about body image. Fey says “But I think the first real change in women’s body image came when JLo turned it butt-style. That was the first time that having a large-scale situation in the back was part of mainstream American beauty. Girls wanted butts now. Men were free to admit that they had always enjoyed them. And then, what felt like moments later, boom—Beyoncé brought the leg meat. A back porch and thick muscular legs were now widely admired. And from that day forward, women embraced their diversity and realized that all shapes and sizes are beautiful. Ah ha ha. No. I’m totally messing with you. All Beyonce and JLo have done is add to the laundry list of attributes women must have to qualify as beautiful. Now every girl is expected to have Caucasian blue eyes, full Spanish lips, a classic button nose, hairless Asian skin with a California tan, a Jamaican dance hall ass, long Swedish legs, small Japanese feet, the abs of a lesbian gym owner, the hips of a nine-year-old boy, the arms of Michelle Obama, and doll tits. The person closest to actually achieving this look is Kim Kardashian, who, as we know, was made by Russian scientists to sabotage our athletes.”
This excerpt is also a good example of the language Fey uses. Again, it’s very casual and relatable, creating a relaxed tone for everyone to enjoy. You often times forget that you are reading a real book, because it seems more like an editorial or essay. Another positive of the casualness of the book is that you can read at whatever pace you want. You can read a few stories and stop, or you can read the whole thing in one sitting. The lack of “chapters” and “cliffhangers” makes it a much more lighthearted read. There is such a strong presence of voice, which is a huge positive in my opinion. Also, it really helps that you are already familiar with Fey and her persona. She has a very strong voice and distinct sense of humor, it makes it even more enjoyable. Even if you have never heard of Tina Fey or her work before, you will find it witty and thought provoking. There is also a lot of interesting information about Fey’s professional life, such as her time with saturday night live, and 30 Rock. The lack of plot or characters does not hurt the value of the book. To me, it is driven by heart and smart humor. You learn a lot, you laugh a lot, and relate to a well known celebrity more than you thought you would. I would recommend this book to anyone of any walks of life, because everyone can take something from it as a “self help” book, as well as a incredibly entertaining and lighthearted read.
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Top critical review

Critical reviews›
ahm
3.0 out of 5 starsUnderwhelming, trying too hard
Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2013
I have to say I was a little underwhelmed by this book. I got it when it was on Kindle for 99 cents. For that price, I'm glad I read it, but I'm also glad I didn't spend much more for it. I really like Tina Fey and generally find her comedy very funny, but this book just did not resonate with me. I was expecting a book chock full of laughs like Mindy Kaling's and Chelsea Handler's and while parts of it were certainly amusing, I think I only laughed out loud once. It covers some surprisingly heavy topics like sexism in comedy, being a working mother and her personal struggles with whether or not to have a second child. The stuff about sexism at SNL, while not exactly a revelation, was at least somewhat interesting. The parts about how hard it is to be a working mother came across as really whiny & extremely lacking in self-awareness. While I have no doubt that it hasn't been easy for her to balance an extremely busy career and parenthood, the reality is that Tina Fey has it better than 99.99% of women in America because she has far more resources to hire help (and also, I would imagine, more flexibility in her schedule since she is basically her own boss). So all of her "anecdotes" about the hardships of working motherhood fell flat with me. I think die-hard fans of SNL and 30 Rock will probably enjoy the book more because there is some interesting behind-the-scenes info about Tina's role in those shows and the development of certain sketches and storylines. While I have watched & enjoy those series, I'm not fanatical about them and I found these parts interesting and fun to read but not gripping. Unfortunately, these were the best parts of the book. Other parts had a very defensive tone, as if she wrote the book directly to her haters (there's actually a chapter where she addresses rude emails she's received - I found it cringeworthy and unfunny) and felt like she had to justify every decision she's ever made. And then there were the parts, like the working mother stuff mentioned above, where she was trying way too hard to come off as relateable to the "average girl." She's obviously not average and people buying the book know that. I wish she had owned it a little more instead of being so defensive.
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ahm
3.0 out of 5 stars Underwhelming, trying too hard
Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2013
Verified Purchase
I have to say I was a little underwhelmed by this book. I got it when it was on Kindle for 99 cents. For that price, I'm glad I read it, but I'm also glad I didn't spend much more for it. I really like Tina Fey and generally find her comedy very funny, but this book just did not resonate with me. I was expecting a book chock full of laughs like Mindy Kaling's and Chelsea Handler's and while parts of it were certainly amusing, I think I only laughed out loud once. It covers some surprisingly heavy topics like sexism in comedy, being a working mother and her personal struggles with whether or not to have a second child. The stuff about sexism at SNL, while not exactly a revelation, was at least somewhat interesting. The parts about how hard it is to be a working mother came across as really whiny & extremely lacking in self-awareness. While I have no doubt that it hasn't been easy for her to balance an extremely busy career and parenthood, the reality is that Tina Fey has it better than 99.99% of women in America because she has far more resources to hire help (and also, I would imagine, more flexibility in her schedule since she is basically her own boss). So all of her "anecdotes" about the hardships of working motherhood fell flat with me. I think die-hard fans of SNL and 30 Rock will probably enjoy the book more because there is some interesting behind-the-scenes info about Tina's role in those shows and the development of certain sketches and storylines. While I have watched & enjoy those series, I'm not fanatical about them and I found these parts interesting and fun to read but not gripping. Unfortunately, these were the best parts of the book. Other parts had a very defensive tone, as if she wrote the book directly to her haters (there's actually a chapter where she addresses rude emails she's received - I found it cringeworthy and unfunny) and felt like she had to justify every decision she's ever made. And then there were the parts, like the working mother stuff mentioned above, where she was trying way too hard to come off as relateable to the "average girl." She's obviously not average and people buying the book know that. I wish she had owned it a little more instead of being so defensive.
2 people found this helpful
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Gadi Wolfsfeld, Author
3.0 out of 5 stars A Good Book, Not a Great One
Reviewed in the United States on July 16, 2011
Verified Purchase
Here's the thing about autobiographies from the world of show-business. There are usually at least three parts. The first is about their childhood, the second about the tough years as they crawl their way to the top, and the final part mostly deals with their life as a celebrity. Tina Fey is an incredibly smart, talented, funny woman but "unfortunately" her childhood was fairly ordinary and this part of the book was the weakest. If you want a good comparison you can read, or even better, listen to Kathy Griffin's book: that woman had some real problems growing up.

The second part of the book - crawling to the top - is better. Tina did work hard to become a success and clearly had to overcome some serious obstacles not the least of which was the common held assumption that women could never be as funny as men. There are certainly a few laughs here, but I sense that her ability to write and deliver sketch and situation comedy material is where her true talents lie. As someone who uses quite a bit of humor in lectures I know that for many delivery and timing is at least half of what makes them funny. Because of this, you might be better served purchasing the audio version of this book and have Tina reading her story aloud (I decided after reading so much about her life, that we are now on a first name basis).

The best part of the book is when she arrives at Saturday Night Live. I, for one, have always been fascinated by the writing process and by the incredible challenge of putting on a live show every week. Tina Fey learned some valuable lessons from her mentor Lorne Michaels and also from her great success producing and staring in 30 Rock. This part of a the book is pure gold. If the entire book were at this level I certainly would have given it five stars.

This is a good book, but not a great one. I enjoyed it but based on Tina Fey's work and the enthusiastic reviews here and elsewhere I was expecting more. I would give it a 7 out of 10.

Official Book Club Selection: A Memoir According to Kathy Griffin
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Courtney Nichole Thompson
3.0 out of 5 stars I love, love
Reviewed in the United States on November 24, 2016
Verified Purchase
I love, love, love Tina Fey. But, this book, not so much. It was just okay. As Tina Fey mentions in her book time and time again, she is an impressionist. She is not a stand up comedian, actress, etc... She can add to the list that she is also not a novelist. But she definitely gave it a good 'ole college try. I love Tina Fey that I really wanted to like this book but it fell short of a few things:

1. Before she worked at SNL, her life was not that interesting. I felt like she had to force material because someone said 'hey, why don't you try your hand at writing a book" and she said "sure, my life's not that interesting but Ill give it a whirl". Then she made the best of it. There were no stories that you could truly connect with and no real development of characters, besides her father, Don Fey.

2. It was hard to follow because the string of events were not chronological, or the topics weren't really paired togehter.

3. I immensely appreciate that she is a feminist but she had a shallow focus on looks - no real introspection on the topic, more like her pouting about being bullied for being called an ugly duckling when she was four.

4. It did not get interesting until she began discussing her 30Rock days

I appreciated that you do get a glimpse at what the industry is like from a more down to earth perspective. For instance, learning what really goes on at photoshoots. The best parts of her story were those concerning her home life - with her husband and daughter. I really wish the book was about that. She did a good job when writing about that and was very funny. I think that is she centered the book on her home life and had her career be the like a sub story line, this book would have been great. But, she did it the other way around. I also love love love her advice for managing others.
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T. Henley
3.0 out of 5 stars A fun read, but a bit thin
Reviewed in the United States on April 19, 2011
Verified Purchase
I'm a big fan of Tina Fey and 30 Rock, so when I first heard about this book, I checked it out immediately. From Amazon's preview pages alone, I was convinced that this would be a fun, light read, which it is. Unfortunately, it's a little too light, as there isn't a lot of depth to the topics that Fey covers. She never gets too detailed when it comes to current personal matters, which is understandable; she's never struck me as the type of celebrity to talk about her personal life at length, so the fact that we get anything in that regard is fine.

But she also glosses over the behind-the-scenes stuff related to 30 Rock and SNL, and her film work is ommitted entirely save for a couple of passing references to Mean Girls. That these topics aren't covered in more depth in favor of an entire chapter on what it's like to be in a magazine photoshoot is pretty disappointing. Although to be fair, she does devote a good deal of time to the Sarah Palin situation.

But where the book really shines is in Fey's dissection of the rampant sexism found in the male-dominated field of comedy, both past and present. She tackles the topic with a humor and eloquence I haven't seen or heard anywhere else, and it's these bits scattered throughout the book that really make it worth reading.

In the end, the book's shortcomings basically balance out with its strong points, leaving it just a decent book. It's difficult to even justify calling it 288 pages long, as the margins and line spacing are larger than I've seen in most books and it also includes several pictures and entire script excerpts from 30 Rock and SNL. I'd say it's realistically about half the advertised length, though it's a totally breezy read. I managed to finish it in one weekend, and I'm generally a pretty slow reader. It's easy to pickup and difficult to put down, though it's a book I could really only recommend for hardcore Tina Fey fans.
23 people found this helpful
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Kristin
3.0 out of 5 stars Don't set your hopes too high; a reluctant memoir
Reviewed in the United States on April 21, 2011
Verified Purchase
Like most women of my generation, I am a fan of Tina Fey. She is a weekly beacon of joy in a sea of unlikable, unrelatable portrayals of women in the media. So it kills me that I didn't like her book!

Two things:

1. Her dry, punchy humor is wonderful for writing performances, but I don't think it works well in long format. She's not so much the best story-teller. Rarely did I find myself captivated by anything in the book or wanting to read more, which made me feel like....

2. She's a very reluctant memoir-writer. The tone often made me feel like I was intruding somehow by reading what she wrote. There are points where she outright says she doesn't want to discuss certain events (*perfectly* understandable.) But her stories feel glossed-over and the people she discusses feel liks frameworks of characters.

(I loved the chapter about her father. It felt rich and I totally understood who he was and how he shaped her life. If the rest of the book had been like that, it would've been great.)

Love Tina Fey and I'll continue to watch 30 Rock like a junkie. But it kills me that I'm not recommending this to my friends. (I'm not a total downer: if you want a fun memoir, I'd choose Kathy Griffin's instead... just because I think she's a bit better at crafting a story.)
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SheriReho
VINE VOICE
3.0 out of 5 stars Color me a bit underwhelmed.
Reviewed in the United States on June 16, 2011
Verified Purchase
I bought this as my first Kindle book because I'd heard it was laugh-out-loud funny and I wanted something light to read on the plane for a trip I was taking. I think I made it halfway through the book before I did anything but mildly chuckle. While I did LOL several times in the last half of the book, I would by no means call this a laugh-out-loud book overall.

As for the quality of the book beyond the laughs, it is very...stream of consciousness is the best way I can describe it but that's not really accurate. It's like the publisher asked her to write down 20 things that bothered her or were important to her or had happened to her. There is no flow to speak of--it just goes from one random subject to another.

It's one of those books that could have only become a best-seller by having been written by a celebrity. If Joe Schmoe Regular Guy wrote it, it probably would never have been accepted for publication.

Are there interesting or touching moments in it? Sure. I have been a fan of SNL for many of the years it has been on the air. I enjoyed reading some behind-the-scenes stories about how SNL is written, etc. I enjoyed (and agreed with) some of her feminist rants about the double standard women often face in the workplace. I enjoyed some of the tongue-in-cheek things she had to say.

But, for me, the bottom line is--would I go on Facebook and tell all of my friends they simply MUST read this book because it's so fabulous? No, I'm afraid not. I enjoyed it while I was reading it, but that's about as far as it goes for me. Sorry Tina...not being a Mean Girl...just speaking my truth (as Oprah would say).
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Rbaker
3.0 out of 5 stars What the what?
Reviewed in the United States on February 12, 2013
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First, let me say that I am an admirer of Tina Fey and consider her work for television to be demonstrably intelligent and palpably funny, both rare and refreshing for that medium. The book is a different matter, especially if you are male, like me, because this book is not written for you. You might enjoy it but IT IS NOT WRITTEN FOR YOU. A good chunk of the book is written about things a male cannot possibly relate to. It's not a bad book, though the style meanders around a bit from purely informative to very funny. Tina's characteristic sarcastic humor sometimes leaves the reader wondering if you just read fact or funny. Also, Tina regularly uses profanity in this book, which much surprised me. What's the need? Is she deliberately wanting to communicate her "earthiness" because she's afraid we all think she's a lightweight? And I hoped the book would contain lots of delicious tidbits about her time in The Second City, SNL and 30 Rock but there isn't much of that. I kinda sorta felt like I knew Tina Fey via her Liz Lemon character, SNL Weekend Update work, and her stints on various talk shows, and I never, despite hearing rumors to the contrary, felt that Tina was a Feminist with an ax to grind. - she's done plenty of glamor photo shoots. Well, this book convinced me I don't know Tina Fey. Long story short, I recommend this book to women - there are plenty of comments on menstruation, motherhood and how unfair the world is to women. To a man only if you are a hard core, die hard, a few episodes away from stalking, Tina Fey fan.
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Joan Rogers
3.0 out of 5 stars You Won't Hate This
Reviewed in the United States on November 26, 2017
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I recommend reading this book if you just finished rewatching all of "30 Rock" for the fifth time and you feel abandoned. Otherwise, skip it. It's authentically Tina Fey, but it's also disorganized and not particularly well written (with the exception of the last two chapters, which have appeared, magically fused and edited, as a really good essay).

If you don't have Fey's voice and delivery in your head, a lot of the book will fall flat. Some comedy really has to be heard to be appreciated--and that doesn't mean it isn't good; similarly, a lot of beautifully written comic literature falls flat when read aloud. If you don't believe me, just try reading P.G. Wodehouse aloud. I'll wait. *beat* Oh, was that you throwing yourself off a bridge? Right.

All of which is to say, this is an okay in-flight read (I'm assuming; I don't fly, either on airplanes or under my own power) and an okay bus stop read (I'm assuming; I don't stop buses) and an okay "I'm dining alone and don't want to make awkward eye contact with strangers" read (also assuming; I am indifferent to the opinions of strangers). So theoretically, there are circumstances appropriate for this book. For example, I read most of it in two-minute segments while brushing my teeth. Does that count as a recommendation? Only my dentist knows for sure.
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J. Bristow
3.0 out of 5 stars OK read but not enough to keep it on my shelf long term
Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2016
Verified Purchase
Tina's book is a well-written although slightly disorganized autobiography of a incredibly creative person I admire greatly. That being said, it was pretty much a fluff piece that was easy to read and, in the end, passed the time agreeably. It was recommended to me as a book "full of management wisdom"-- if that is what you are looking for, look elsewhere. There are lots of better management tomes out there depending on the specific type of techniques you are looking for. There seems to be a little of the PC undercurrent with respect to a lot of deference being paid to the gay community. If this is objectionable to you, I would avoid the book. The industry in which Ms. Fey makes her living is one of the most progressive (and earliest) recognizer of gender issues and it was clearly a large part of her development -- criticizing her discussion of this is unfair.
I found the read to be OK...it was not what I was looking for but that does not diminish the value of the story to others. It isn't a book I will keep around--it has already been recycled to the used book store. Bottomline: if you like Tina (and her work) and want to know more about her, the book is worth the commonly discounted price and the time.
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Nightowl.Bookworm
3.0 out of 5 stars Not as funny as I expected
Reviewed in the United States on June 1, 2018
Verified Purchase
Tina Fey's book was fine. That's it. I had high expectations after hearing how it was laugh out loud funny, but even if I went in with no expectations I don't think this would have gotten more than 3 stars from me. I didn't laugh out loud once and only occasionally cracked a smile The book is a collection of essays/stories that lacked focus as a whole and didn't have much to offer individually. I wasn't expecting anything profound, but they had nothing to say and the sarcastic humor often just felt too mean to be funny. I'm a fan of Tina Fey and find her hilarious in general, but the humor didn't come through her book for me. Some stories were enjoyable but I was left disappointed as a whole. I still gave it 3 stars because I think it could be a great read for the right reader, but for me it was just okay.
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