I Love Everybody (and Other Atrocious Lies): True Tales of a Loudmouth Girl

· Sold by Villard
4.5
20 reviews
Ebook
240
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

Here are more scathingly funny tales from the wild side! Laurie Notaro survived the debauched ride of her twenties and the bumpy road to matrimony. Now she’s ready to take on the thirtysomething years . . . and almost middle age has never been more hilarious.

Laurie is married, mortgaged, and now—miraculously—employed in the corporate world, discovering that bosses come in all shapes, sizes, and degrees of mental stability. After maxing out her last good credit card at Banana Republic, she’s dressed for success and ready to face the jungle: surviving feral, six-foot-plus Gretchen (“Three Thousand Faces of Eve”) before battling the overbearing, overstuffed (in way-too-small pants) new mom Suzzi, who ruthlessly cancels Laurie’s newspaper column and learns that payback can be a bitch. Laurie also explores the backstabbing world of preschoolers at a Halloween party, the X-rated madness of a family trip to Disneyland, and the pressure from her QVC-addicted mother and the rest of the world to reproduce. But while losing more friends to babies than to booze, she realizes there’s a plus side: at least for a couple of months she gets to be the thinner friend.

I Love Everybody (and Other Atrocious Lies) is Laurie Notaro at her deliciously quirky best. Can a woman prone to what her loved ones might term “meltdowns” (she considers them “Opportunities to Enlighten”) put a smile on her face and love everybody? Take a guess.

Ratings and reviews

4.5
20 reviews
A Google user
December 6, 2009
Well, this was pretty funny - there were definitely a few laugh-out-loud parts. I especially enjoyed "The Sims" essay, but, overall, I thought that her second book has been her funniest. This one felt a little too personal - she discusses her first book deal, choosing to not have children... I don't know - some sections felt too much like reading someone's diary, albeit a funny diary, but a diary nonetheless. Also, some of the essays were a bit redundant, with the same jokes appearing throughout. I guess, I would say it is on par with her first book.
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Kelly Eadie
February 26, 2016
Written by my favorite author! Everything Laurie writes about is TOTALLY RELATABLE! I laughed myself to tears reading the first story! I love reading this on airplanes. People give the strangest looks when you're laughing so hard that you're crying! L-O-V-E this book!!
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Andi Gee
February 1, 2018
Loved it , I read it out loud to my daughter. Years ago and we just finished reading it again now that she's an adult. Classic
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About the author

Laurie Notaro has been fired from seven jobs, laid off from three, and voluntarily liberated from one. Despite all that, she has managed to write a number of New York Times bestselling essay collections. She lives with her husband in Oregon, where—according to her mother, who refuses to visit—she sleeps in a trailer in the woods.

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