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About the Author

Melissa Warburg Rosenberg was born on January 20, 1968 in Manhattan. She is the only child of Joan Rivers and Edgar Rosenberg. She attended the private John Thomas Dye School in Bel-Air and then The Buckley School in Sherman Oaks, California. She graduated from the University of Pennsylvania, where show more she received a degree in European History in 1989. As an actress, she has had roles in television shows including Beverly Hills, 90210, and Silk Stalkings, The Comeback.In 1998, she also appeared in the sci-fi/comedy made-for-television movie Men in White and in the 1999 film The Big Tease. In the early 1990s, she branched out on the pre-show red carpet, interviewing celebrities on nationally televised awards shows. With her mother, she hosted fashion on the red carpet interviews for the E! cable network. In 2003, they left her red carpet pre-show on E! to accept a more lucrative deal with the TV Guide Channel valued at between $6 and 8 million. In 2015 her book The Book of Joan: Tales of Mirth, Mischief, and Manipulation made The New York Times Best Seller List. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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17 reviews
This is made more delightful and entertaining by the fact Melissa Rivers narrates the work herself, making it a performance. I think that is the best way to think of it - like a Rivers stand-up special of edge-pushing zingers. The satire and fictions, I am sure, keep any real memoir or biography from coming through, so enjoy it for what it is and laugh along.
Lies My Mother Told Me by Melissa Rivers is a disappointment on several levels but mostly just the lack of real humor and more just a shaking of the head response.

I'm of the age that my stronger opinions will be about Joan and not Melissa, Joan was everywhere on shows when I was growing up. I was never a fan but I usually enjoyed her humor and delivery. I think what I found most engaging was when she would be bantering with someone rather than her monologues, they were more hit or miss for show more me. This is all to say that I am coming to this without strong feelings either way about either Joan or Melissa.

I think what I found most off-putting was the frame of the "lies" Melissa attributes to Joan, as if Joan thought Melissa was truly stupid enough to believe these things. Yes, I know that is a conceit used for the book but even conceits can be faulty. Melissa even tries to exempt her book from criticism by throwing out partially correct literary definitions at the beginning.

I listened to the audiobook which is read by Melissa. That is both a positive and a negative in this case. While she often got her mother's voice in the writing she missed the mark in her reading. Some other narrator might have been given a little more slack by a listener. That said, this book is written in a personal manner such that it is hard to think about someone other than Melissa saying "me" and "I" so much.

I think I would have preferred this if she had simply said these were some of my mother's favorite "embellishments" and not make the frame imply Joan would actually misinform her daughter about almost everything, large or small. Between Melissa just not being all that funny and her inability to deliver the humor properly in the stories that were really her mother's, in either written or oral form, this just didn't work for me.

Having explained why I found little to personally like here, I should also mention that for many, especially those who might only know Joan's work from the last decades of her life, this may well be a delightful book. Even the stories/lies/jokes that I felt missed the mark have a humorous core, so for those who like Melissa'a delivery, or her imitation of Joan's delivery, this might be a laugh out loud book.

Reviewed from a copy made available by the publisher via NetGalley.
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½
Thank you RB Media and Net Galley for a free copy of the audiobook "Lies My Mother Told Me" by Melissa Rivers. I laughed out loud throughout this book! I grew up listening to Joan Rivers and her tales and jokes so I was curious about Melissa Rivers', Joan's daughter, take on her life and her relationship with her mother. I was not disappointed. It was a fun retelling of stories throughout Melissa's life and the ridiculous stories her mother told her. I found this humorous and entertaining, show more but there is course language throughout for those that don't like that type of story. Having Melissa Rivers as the narrator made the book that much more enjoyable! show less
This book is a series of essays about Joan and Melissa. Overall, they are funny and poignant. But oh my lord. Melissa Rivers is not funny. Her supposedly funny metaphors and similes fall flat – flat as a pancake. (See what I did there?) The other thing that made me uncomfortable was Melissa telling us which celebrities Joan personally didn’t like. It doesn’t seem classy and I don’t think Joan would have done that if she were alive. I mean sure she skewered people as part of her act show more but she never just came out and said, “I don’t like Ben Stiller because he doesn’t have good manners.”

Although I inwardly groaned at Melissa’s attempts at humor, I did enjoy learning what Joan Rivers was like a person, mother and grandma. I think Joan Rivers fans would enjoy this book.
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