The follow up to her bestselling breakout hit How to Be a Woman, Moranthology is a hilarious, insightful collection of Moranâs London Times columns that confirms her status as âthe UKâs answer to Tina Fey, Chelsea Handler, and Lena Dunham all rolled into one.â (Marie Claire)
Possibly the only drawback about the bestselling How to Be a Woman was that its author, Caitlin Moran, was limited to pretty much one subject: being a woman. Moranthology is proof that Caitlin can actually be âquite chattyâ about many other things, including cultural, social and political issues that are usually the province of learned professors, or hot-shot wonksâand not of a woman who once, as an experiment, put a wasp in a jar, and got it stoned.
Here youâll find Caitlin ruminating onâand sometimes interviewingâsubjects as varied as caffeine, Keith Richards, Ghostbusters, Twitter, the welfare state, the royal wedding, Lady Gaga, and her own mortality, to name just a few. With her âbrilliant, original voiceâ (Publishers Weekly), Caitlin brings insight and humor to everything she writes.
What happens when the UKâs sharpest columnist turns her sights on⊠everything? Candid Memoir: From getting a wasp stoned as a teenager to navigating marriage, Moran holds nothing back in these deeply personal and laugh-out-loud funny essays.Celebrity Interviews: Go backstage with Lady Gaga at a Berlin sex club, share a cigarette with Keith Richards, and spend the day with Paul McCartney.Feminist Essays: Sharp, insightful, and never preachy, Moran tackles everything from the case for employment quotas to the complicated politics of a womanâs wardrobe.Pop Culture Deep Dives: Find out why Ghostbusters is the greatest film of all time and explore the "frumious Cumberbatch" in her celebrated reviews of Sherlock.
The follow up to her bestselling breakout hit How to Be a Woman, Moranthology is a hilarious, insightful collection of Moranâs London Times columns that confirms her status as âthe UKâs answer to Tina Fey, Chelsea Handler, and Lena Dunham all rolled into one.â (Marie Claire)
Possibly the only drawback about the bestselling How to Be a Woman was that its author, Caitlin Moran, was limited to pretty much one subject: being a woman. Moranthology is proof that Caitlin can actually be âquite chattyâ about many other things, including cultural, social and political issues that are usually the province of learned professors, or hot-shot wonksâand not of a woman who once, as an experiment, put a wasp in a jar, and got it stoned.
Here youâll find Caitlin ruminating onâand sometimes interviewingâsubjects as varied as caffeine, Keith Richards, Ghostbusters, Twitter, the welfare state, the royal wedding, Lady Gaga, and her own mortality, to name just a few. With her âbrilliant, original voiceâ (Publishers Weekly), Caitlin brings insight and humor to everything she writes.
What happens when the UKâs sharpest columnist turns her sights on⊠everything? Candid Memoir: From getting a wasp stoned as a teenager to navigating marriage, Moran holds nothing back in these deeply personal and laugh-out-loud funny essays.Celebrity Interviews: Go backstage with Lady Gaga at a Berlin sex club, share a cigarette with Keith Richards, and spend the day with Paul McCartney.Feminist Essays: Sharp, insightful, and never preachy, Moran tackles everything from the case for employment quotas to the complicated politics of a womanâs wardrobe.Pop Culture Deep Dives: Find out why Ghostbusters is the greatest film of all time and explore the "frumious Cumberbatch" in her celebrated reviews of Sherlock.