From the creator of the iconic 'Cathy' comic strip comes her first collection of funny, wise, poignant, and incredibly honest essays about being a woman in what she lovingly calls 'the panini generation.'
Cathy Guisewite is the creator of the "Cathy" comic strip, which ran in nearly 1,400 newspapers for thirty-four years. The strips have been compiled into more than twenty books, and earned Guisewite the National Cartoonists Society Reuben Award in 1992 and an Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program for the TV special of Cathy in 1987. She currently lives in California with her daughter.
One of:
Real Simple's "Best Books of 2019 (So Far)"
O Magazine’s “25 2019 Books We Can't Wait For”
Parents.com's "9 Books That Make Great Mother-Daughter
Gifts"
PopSugar’s “Buzzy Books to Read This Spring”
InStyle's "7 Books to Put on Your April Reading List"
Nylon's “15 Great Books to Read This April”
Bustle’s “29 New Memoirs Out In Spring To Help You Welcome
Warm-Weather Reading”
“The creator of the iconic cartoon Cathy comes out of
retirement to make us laugh, cry, and remind us—with humor and
pathos—that yes, we...live to tell the tale.”—O, The Oprah
Magazine
“Often hilarious and true, [Fifty Things That Aren't My Fault] gets
at that tension between the empowerment propaganda women are raised
on and the gendered I-am-responsible-for-everyone's-well-being
reality in which most of us still live.”—TIME
"This new book will feel like a friend...the kind who knows exactly
what to say when you need some reassurance."—NPR
"Bright essays that send up the absurdities of modern middle
age."—Vanity Fair
"Heartfelt and hilarious essays."—Parade
“With touching honesty and humor, [Cathy Guisewite] reflects on
caring for her aging parents and raising her daughter. It's a book
for Cathy fans and everyone else.”—Real Simple
"A series of humorous musings on life after 60 as she navigates
between grown children and elderly parents."—Newsday
"Tackles aging, transitions, children and the struggle of being
part of what she calls 'the panini generation.'"—New York Post
“Cathy's appeal lay in the fact that she spoke openly about the
things that women weren't supposed to talk about: anxiety and
insecurity and frustrations. She was a touchstone for neurotic
girls and women of all ages.... [Her] forthcoming essay collection
is as full of humor and pathos about life's many mundanities as
you'd want it to be. Only this time, there's no comic strips, it's
all Guisewite's voice—reliably sane, sparkling, and suffused with
the same warmth and wit as we've all come to expect. What a
treat.”—Nylon
“Equally parts warm, laugh-out-loud funny, and charming. Guaranteed
to make you fall in love with Cathy all over again.”—PopSugar
"Relatable, hilarious, and just awesome."—Parents
"This is a book that will wrap around you like a hug, with warmth,
with and wisdom. From the futility of finding jeans that fit out of
dozens in the closet to the equally futile task of trying to get
parents to learn TiVo, every woman and every daughter will
recognize themselves in Fifty Things That Aren't My Fault."—Shelf
Awareness
"Smart, funny essays... Those taking care of both children and
parents will relate but everyone will benefit from Guisewite's
humorous take on contemporary life."—Orange County
Register
“[Guisewite] offers a new way to savor the humor of her classic
comic-strip character. Absurd and often witty takes on life as a
caregiver, mother, and woman.”—Austin American-Statesman
"Now in this hilarious essay collection, Guisewite delights us
again with the same kind of deadpan humor that made her comic strip
a legend."—Palm Beach Post
"Guisewite's humor, empathy and insightfulness combine to create a
clever and highly entertaining look at the challenges and issues
faced by women today."—BookReporter
“Finally, a reason to laugh about growing older.”—Best Life
“A funny and heartwarming telling of her experience in
womanhood.”—Harvard Crimson
“The humorous and at time poignant book reflects the concept of
aging, tackling, in turns, feminism, the difficulty of removing
sports bras, kids moving out of the home, the death of parents, and
more. You'll laugh, you'll cry, and you'll definitely say, 'That's
so me!'”—Mind Body Green
“Guisewite hits the mark....Offers a new way to savor the humor of
her classic comic-strip character. Absurd and often witty takes on
life as a caregiver, mother, and woman.”—Kirkus Reviews
“Guisewite finds her voice when she delves into her relationships
with her daughter and parents and examines the struggles of aging
and loss, which she does with humor and a deft eye for detail...
[Fifty Things That Aren't My Fault is] a work with real
heart...Guisewite is not Ephron, but she's not trying to be. She's
emphatically, jubilantly, Cathy.”—Library Journal
“Struggling with the indignities of aging and the stress of caring
for both a teenage daughter and elderly parents, Cathy cartoonist
Guisewite finds an outlet for her frustrations in this amusing
debut essay collection....Women who can relate to her experiences
and concerns will enjoy her girlfriendish voice and appreciate the
more substantive material.”—Publishers Weekly
“Fans of Cathy, rejoice! Cartoonist Guisewite is back with a
hilarious collection of essays....Covering topics that are
eminently relatable to today’s readers with her characteristic
forthright humor, Guisewite’s essays are well written and
affecting....Fans of the comic will be thrilled at these later-year
insights into a character they love....New readers will be charmed
by the author's wit and turn of phrase. Ack!”—Booklist
“Cathy Guisewite must have discovered early that laughter is the
only free emotion—the only one that cannot be compelled—because she
gave us the gift of freedom in her 'Cathy' comic strip. Now, in
Fifty Things That Aren't My Fault, she has written a book that will
help us free our lives to the very end.”—Gloria Steinem
“Cathy was always the comic-book character who summed up what we
were thinking, whether it was about calories, clothing, bosses,
stress, or that extra cinnamon bun. Freed from the brevity of a
single frame, creator Cathy Guisewite lets her signature voice and
humor fly with Fifty Things That Aren't My Fault, and tackles the
subjects of parenting, caregiving, aging, food, and so much more.
Aack! It's fabulous.”—Lee Woodruff, author of Perfectly
Imperfect
“Cathy Guisewite lets us know that it's okay to be a woman who's
half Betty Crocker and half Betty Friedan. It's okay to listen to
your mother. It's okay to miss the legs you used to hate. Nobody's
perfect, but imperfect people tell the best stories. Women are
resilient. And everybody says ‘AACK!’”—Helen Ellis, author
of American Housewife
“There is humor; there is comedy; there is Cathy, who gives us
laughter but reaches way beyond the funny bone to touch us with her
humane, entertaining, and satisfying collection. Cathy Guisewite is
one of those personalities who bubble up from the page, then reach
out to become our friend, fellow sufferer, and favorite observer of
just about everything. Add her to your life.”—George Hodgman,
author of Bettyville
“Cathy Guisewite, a bona fide hero for so many of us as we came of
age, has delivered a one-two hilarious punch with her
book—intimate, powerful, funny, emotional, real, and riveting.
Cathy bares her soul and proves once again that happily, truly, we
are all in this together.”—Beth Grant, actress (The Mindy Project,
Little Miss Sunshine)
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