I Used to Be Charming: The Rest of Eve Babitz

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Product Details

Price
$19.95  $18.55
Publisher
New York Review of Books
Publish Date
Pages
448
Dimensions
4.9 X 0.9 X 7.9 inches | 1.0 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781681373799
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author

Eve Babitz is the author of several books of fiction, including Eve's Hollywood and Slow Days, Fast Company, both published by NYRB Classics. Her other nonfiction works include Fiorucci, the Book and Two by Two: Tango, Two-Step, and the L.A. Night. She has written for many publications, including Ms. And Esquire, and in the late 1960s designed album covers for the Byrds, Buffalo Springfield, and Linda Ronstadt.

Molly Lambert is a writer from and in Los Angeles. She has written for publications including The New York Times, The New Yorker, and GQ, and was a staff writer at the websites Grantland and MTV News. She hosts the podcast Molly's Sleazy Friends and co-hosts Night Call.

Sara J. Kramer is the managing editor of NYRB Classics.

Reviews

"There's something divine about Babitz's vision of the world, mixed with some incandescent undercurrent of delusion--sordid, surreal, and alienated from reality. ... Every essay lurches as unpredictably as Babitz's prose, toggling rapidly between sneering and leering. But even when Babitz leers, it's like the Pope waving through the glass of his Popemobile: her leering conveys a blessing." --Heather Havrilevsky, Air Mail

"Zesty essays by a sly observer ... [Babitz] gathers nearly 40 personal essays, book reviews, travel pieces, and celebrity profiles, published between 1976 and 1997, that give ebullient testimony to her colorful, star-studded past ... A spirited, entertaining collection." --Kirkus


"After all these years it seems Babitz is finally the literary 'It' girl she always thought herself to be."--Merle Ginsberg, Los Angeles Magazine
"Eve Babitz has done as much as anyone (except maybe the very different Joan Didion) to define an L.A. state of mind. She's fun to read and her essays stay with you for weeks after you read them, teasing your mind with insight after indelible insight." --Michael Silverblatt, KCRW, "Best of 2019: Books"

"There's Adam, and then there is of course Eve Babitz. There are those who call her a party girl, but in truth she documented her times and social world in Southern California as if she was Charles Dickens. Or perhaps Marcel Proust." --Tosh Berman

"The most charming writer I've read in years." --Geoff Dyer, The Threepenny Review

"A writer who's given a steep amount of pleasure over the past year. That writer is the Los Angeles-born glamour girl, bohemian, artist, muse, sensualist, wit and pioneering foodie Eve Babitz, whose prose reads like Nora Ephron's by way of Joan Didion, albeit with more lust and drugs and tequila." --Dwight Garner, The New York Times

"Eve is to prose what Chet Baker, with his light, airy style, lyrical but also rhythmic, detached but also sensuous, is to jazz, or what Larry Bell, with his glass confections, the lines so clean and fresh and buoyant, is to sculpture. She's a natural. Or gives every appearance of being one, her writing elevated yet slangy, bright, bouncy, cheerfully hedonistic--L.A. in its purest, most idealized form." --Lili Anolik, Vanity Fair

"If her books are any indication, she seems to have known more about life at an early age than most of us figure out before we die." --Holly Brubach, The New York Times

"One of the best writers about LA in American literature." --Laura Pearson, Chicago Tribune

"Her writing took multiple forms, from romans à clef to essayistic cultural commentaries to reviews to urban-life vignettes to short stories. But in the center was always Babitz and her sensibility--fun and hot and smart, a Henry James-loving party girl." --Naomi Fry, The New Republic