Reviews for Why Not Me?

by Mindy Kaling

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Light yet insightful personal essays from one of Hollywood's cleverest writers. Kaling (Is Everyone Hanging Out with Me?, 2011) dishes up another collection of humorous first-person essays on topics ranging from exposs borne of her insider's view on TV stardom"Sex scenes are the tits"to an inspirational speech she gave at Harvard Law School. Photographs interspersed throughout the book help underscore the author's kindly self-deprecating sense of humor and demonstrate her points about the stages of her typical 17-hour workday ("A Day in the Life of Mindy Kaling") or the value of having a flotilla of stylists prepare you for a photo shoot ("How to Look Spectacular: A Starlet's Confessions"). Fans of The Office and The Mindy Project will relish Kaling's snapshots from the writers' room and no-holds-barred depiction of the breakneck pace at which this writer/show-running actor lives while at work on her series. Readers less familiar with Kaling's TV exploits will also find interesting food for thought in more extended pieces examining friendship and varying levels of intimacy. Though the collection might easily be relegated to the shelves of chick-lit memoir for its bald appeal to young women or "a gay man getting a present for your even gayer friend," Kaling's reflections on her own self-image reveal an admirable depth of introspection. Particularly motivational is the volume's closing piece, in which the author calls out undeserved confidence: "Confidence is just entitlement...simply the belief that you deserve something. Which is great. The hard part is, you'd better make sure you deserve it." Having had to continually face the gauntlet of questions of what it's like enduring her Hollywood "otherness" due to her Indian origin, curvaceous figure, and willingness to speak the truth, Kaling espouses her hard-won mantra: "If you've got it, flaunt it. And if you don't got it? Flaunt it. 'Cause what are we even doing here if we're not flaunting it?" Intrepid and often irreverent, Kaling humbly probes her own triumphs and defeats with laugh-out-loud results. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Following the success of Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? Kaling delivers a delightful collection of stories about her continuing quest to be an adult. The essays cover expected topics, such as appearance, fitting in, and the quest for friends, but are done in such a way that the listener feels they are chatting with an old friend over a glass (or four) of wine, the feeling of which is enhanced by Kaling's narration. Guest appearances by B.J. Novak and Greg Daniels are a nice touch. Some of the essays are more poignant and feel very personal, yet Kaling never strays into the "poor little famous me" realm. -Verdict Overall, a charming and quick listen that is sure to leave a smile on the face of Kaling's fans.-Donna Bachowski, Orange Cty. Lib. Syst., Orlando, FL © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

Following up her widely popular first memoir, Is Everyone Hanging Out without Me? (And Other Concerns) (2011), Kaling's conversational second book will leave readers wondering how its author even found the time to stop and reflect on let alone write about her life as a thirtysomething, many-hat-wearing Hollywoodian. She's busy! But, as we could only hope, she is definitely not all business. Candid about her career and the struggles therein, Kaling opens up about how she may have been hard to manage as a writer on The Office, and how her current The Mindy Project, though a darling of critics, has not always been so popular with the networks. And there's more personal dish, too: What's really the deal with her famous friendship with fellow writer and Office star B. J. Novak? Who's the White House insider she dated? Well, actually, she doesn't tell us who, but it's a great chapter anyway. (In one instance, there's a celebrity name she won't drop in print, but Kaling says if we ever run into her, she'll tell us and you get the impression she means it.) Photos and subheadings divide chapters for zippy reading. There are thoughtful lessons, too: entitlement can be good, if it comes from confidence and hard work hence the book's title. And having confidence, for that matter, if you're not a certain color, size, or gender is a wonderful kind of subversion. The audience for this book, as for the recent Bossypants (2011) and Yes Please (2014), is an enthusiastic one; order accordingly.--Bostrom, Annie Copyright 2015 Booklist