![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjAlGkYtlWbUILaw3Adp-3AdanIEJQHESaztnJjRdcuGQKA7Uis97gl4sgK2MTyu4dtHYmjkBV0iq_ATIbiTP1GFwbf3XjigW1MqhdbvIIO7rGDvPzP8QChZXpH8w2R0sD2iDfT/s400/books330.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjtVdcKRw0EBb5ddVlTz5OABfY9_WWD4jzTnPrNXPamUTvJ-g7Z49eTTVHFgTBtMNRlbnxq9nnnlqJtrBIbIuPn_U4gCjWC5_ZWsEejlsAUtZZGi-Xt3kbQiNBmqHzlujBjNh32/s200/collins.jpg)
I ordered it immediately and I've now read about half of it. So far, I'm very disappointed because I feel as if I read every word of it 40 years ago or more -- above is a photo of my dusty attic bookshelf with so many of the sources of her material. I even recognize a number of her little vignette stories. Below is another photo of two very well known and extreme examples of books by individuals she mentions in the book.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjpLI2KULLupE3LJuyj4NUd_YgLzuNgk1WIujqhYNcUmT1Sk2miop7Vc_Swu1s9Un_qDjbfFCBjzsqqmtnvRjaHdGEMOQpDtSSeRTRt6w7CBvbciX8GFsuBeJdWMi1bjqgeP_8R/s320/books333.jpg)
If Collins had something new to say -- something witty and fun to read like her New York Times columns -- the sense of nothing new wouldn't be so bad. Usually when she comments on current events, she's discussing something that I read in the paper that week, not a lifetime ago, and she manages not to seem redundant. Unfortunately, I hardly recognize the Gail Collins that I thought I knew.
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I will try to read the second half of the book and hope it gets better.
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