“The book an author produces after a wildly popular debut has all eyes on it. “Brosh alternates sorrow with levity-funny childhood stories, more animal tales, and general musings on life and its lack of meaning or fairness-with grace that feels true to life.” Another standout from Brosh that is both heartening and heartbreaking.” In trying to overcome her weaknesses, by spending a night alone in the woods, she reminds us that it’s okay not to be okay. “Through it all, is refreshingly vulnerable and honest. This achingly accurate and consistently hilarious comic memoir finds Brosh moving forward and becoming a stronger, braver storyteller page by page.” spidery and demented digital portraits, a visual expression of fun-house mirror anxiety, fits her material perfectly. Like a millennial James Thurber, Brosh has a knack for seeding a small, choice detail that snowballs into existential chaos. For Brosh’s millions of fans, this is well worth the wait.” reliably channels the simplicity of a child or the innocence of an animal and tells raucous, heartbreaking stories that reflect the hidden parts of us all. “Brosh’s storytelling is so distinctive and compelling it’s like suddenly running in to a friend you feared was lost forever.
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