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LIZ HEATHER

December 14, 2022

The Storyteller: Tales of Life and Music By Dave Grohl - A Review

by Liz Heather in Reviews


the storyteller Dave Grohl Liz Heather Foo Fighters Nirvana book memoir

It’s a well known fact that I intensely love Dave Grohl. Always have, always will. Whatever he does, I will support. I’m a little shocked that it took me so long to finally read his memoir, but here we are! Favourite parts ahead.

  • “DNA is a miraculous thing. We all carry traits of people we have never met somewhere deep within our chemistry. I’m no scientist, but I believe that my musical abilities are proof of this. There is no divine intervention here. This is flesh and blood. This is something that comes from the inside out.”

  • “From my first tour at the age of eighteen, I always loved traveling to Canada. The hash was good, the girls were cute, and the shows were consistently wild. Canadians are fucking awesome. Laid-back, genuine, and funny as hell. I defy anyone to walk one city block without making a fast friend in Canada.”

  • And speaking of Canada, I absolutely love the fact that he met and played with Iggy Pop at the goddam Rivoli of all places.

  • The story where he breaks his leg during a show is incredible.

  • He spoke so high of the Ring of Kerry in Ireland that I looked it up and wow. Putting it on the travel list.

  • He mentioned how his mom wrote a book (with contributions from others) called From Cradle To Stage: Stories from the Mothers Who Rocked and Raised Rock Stars that sounds great and I really want to read next. They also appears to be a series??

  • One of the post-show meals he kept mentioned? KFC chicken and champagne. And I mean, it honestly sounds just gross enough to be fantastic.

Obviously this was published after Taylor Hawkins passed away, so I can’t imagine how hard that must have been for his to go through since he talks about him so lovingly throughout the whole book. Honestly, just such a great read.

TAGS: Dave Grohl, The Storyteller, Dave Grohl book, Liz Heather, Foo Fighters, Nirvana, Taylor Hawkins, rock memoir, great book, books


February 21, 2022

Yours Cruelly, Elvira Memoirs of the Mistress of the Dark by Cassandra Peterson - A Review

by Liz Heather in Reviews


elvira book cover
elvira book cover

I’ve always loved Elvira (that should be obvious based on my entire personality), so I was elated when I found out she’d be writing a memoir. It’s as juicy and entertaining as I’d hoped it would be and so much more. This woman has had an insane life. Highlights below.

  • “My dad soon landed a job at Sears selling Kenmore appliances, so every shred of clothing on our backs came from Sears from then on. (Which explains why, to this day, I have no fashion sense.)” - I can’t explain why, but I absolutely love a woman saying that about herself. I don’t think it’s even true in this case, but I love hearing that she thinks that and doesn’t care. She couldn’t be cooler.

  • “Halloween took over as my new favorite holiday. As our ex-first lady so eloquently put it, “Who gives a fuck about Christmas?”” - hahahahahah

  • This isn’t really notable but Lorne Michaels was such a complete dick to her, I wonder what the story is there.

  • Jimmy Page and Eric Burdon are both gross, awful men for what they did to her when she was only a child. And in that same vein, Wilt Chamberlain sexually assaulted her in the most disgusting way that’s difficult to read about, but also so wildly brave of her to speak of it.

  • Christ, she has had so many cool things happen to her, a short list:

    • She was a teenage showgirl in Las Vegas

    • She spit in Frank Sinatra’s hat

    • She was in a Bond movie

    • She passed on casting Brad Pitt and Hilary Swank in parts before they were famous

    • Drank in a limo with Ray Bradbury

    • Been to Zsa Zsa Gabor’s Christmas parties

    • She mailed letters back and forth with Vincent Price

    • Michael Jackson said that he loved her and that she should’ve done the voiceover in Thriller

    • She got to shoot a scene at the original Psycho house

    • Elvis told her to leave Las Vegas before it was too late

    • Was a tour guide to Goldie Hawn

    • Went on a double date with Arnold Schwarzenegger

    • Offered coke from Liza Minnelli

    • Had sex with Tom Jones, Jon Voight, Robert De Niro and almost Jimi Hendrix

I’ve never read a memoir that was juicier than this one. And all that stuff aside, she’s just had this incredible, full life in show business. It’s weird that the only thing I heard about this book after it was initially released was about how she’s now in a relationship with a woman, that was always mentioned in the headline of every single review. Yes, that’s in the book (in the last two chapters) but it’s such a footnote compared to every other part of the memoir. Seems a little annoying that people would focus in on that aspect alone, since there are so many more things to focus on. Even if you’re not very familiar with her work, this is such a great read.

Your Cruelly, Elvira Memoirs of the Mistress of the Dark is available over here.

TAGS: Elvira: Mistress of the Dark, Elvira, Elvira book, Liz Heather, Cassandra Peterson, Yours Cruelly, Yours Cruelly Elvira Mistress of the Dark, book review, great book, Hatchette Books, Jimmy Page, Wilt Chamberlain, Sears, Eric Burdon, Las Vegas, Frank Sinatra, Bond movie, Brad Pitt, Hilary Swank, Ray Bradbury, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Vincent Price, Michael Jackson, Psycho house, Elvis Presley, Goldie Hawn, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Liza Minnelli, Tom Jones, Jon Voight, Robert De Niro, Jimi Hendrix


March 26, 2021

Enter Talking by Joan Rivers - A Review

by Liz Heather in Reviews


enter talking.jpg
enter talking.jpg

I’ve always sort of hated Joan Rivers, mainly because my only knowledge of her was associated with the dreadful show Fashion Police. It was only when I saw the documentary on her A Piece of Work that I actually started to like her very much. And since I love reading the biographies of comedians (Martin Short, Penny Marshall, Jen Kirkman, Sarah Silverman, Chelsea Handler, Bob Newhart, Lucille Ball, Roseanne, Amy Poehler, the list goes on), it was only a matter of time before I found hers. And I’m so glad that I did. Enter Talking is incredibly raw, honest and nothing like what I was expecting. Best parts ahead.

  • When she’s talking about working at a temp job while still auditioning around New York on her lunch breaks: “Please, God, if you’re going to make me a failure, fine. But don’t make me a failure at something I don’t want to do.“

  • “There was an afternoon when Milt, his umbrella dribbling a puddle on the floor, sat by my desk - Milt Kamen, the subject of articles in Time and Newsweek, lines waiting to see him at The Blue Angel, a regular on the Jack Paar show - white white hot. Talking about comedy as we always did, he said, “One day they’re going to realize I’m not funny.” Well, that scared the hell out of me. You think everybody else is secure - that Mommy and Daddy are not scared. Then the day comes when the mother says, “You look in the closet, not me,” and you realize you were correct to be frightened. Milt Kamen was on quicksand, too, and it would never be any different for me. That’s the comedian’s psyche. That’s where I am right now.”

  • “The way my mother sees things, she has two daughters that aren’t, as the expression goes, moving. She is so desperate to get me married, that if a murderer called, she’d say, “So, he has a temper.””

  • “Somehow, some way, every person in the arts has to find an accommodation with disappointment and embarrassment. They are pollen in the air we breathe. If you must go into the arts, go into them for yourself alone. On some basic level you must enjoy the act of doing it - be willing to paint a picture and just hang it on your wall. If you want to be an actor, then learn to enjoy it in your bathroom. Otherwise, you are going to end up frustrated and unhappy. Recognition in the arts is luck and gravy.”

  • “I know now that everybody in the arts is forever a beginning. Experience counts for a great deal and very little. Every night on stage I feel I am starting from scratch, still not quite sure what I am doing and where I am going, thrown by the simplest thing that goes wrong. And there is a marvelous remark Jack Benny once made to me about performing in nightclubs. He said, “No matter how big you are, you have to get to the stage through the kitchen.””

It honestly reads like less of a biography and more of a detailed run-through about the hurdles of breaking into show business and how you endlessly have to believe in yourself no matter what happens. Such an insanely driven, inspiring woman.

TAGS: Joan Rivers, Enter Talking, Enter Talking Joan Rivers, Joan Rivers book, show business book, comedian biography, Liz Heather, great book, book review


October 16, 2020

Happy Fat by Sofie Hagen - A Review

by Liz Heather in Reviews


44286091._SY475_.jpg
44286091._SY475_.jpg

I can’t remember for the life of me who told me to check out this woman and this book, but I vaguely remember seeing the cover somewhere and instantly knowing that it’d be great. So, so happy to have found this book and Sofie herself. Best parts of the book ahead!

  • “Beauty is so subjective. It is laughable that we have somehow been tricked into thinking we all should find the same thing pretty.”

  • I’ve gone back and forth about the idea of cosmetic surgery for years - how it’s great that if you want to change something, you can! Go for it! It’s your life! But also the other side of that coin… just bums me out. There was something in the book that made me (finally, I hope) come to the conclusion that it really just makes me sad that anyone actually believes that they need to change themselves to be “better.” Real change and happiness comes from within yourself and being good to yourself and others. This sounds very after-school-special, yes, but those programs had a good point.

  • “When fat people say to me, ‘Oh, I could never love myself, I don’t have that confidence,’ I tell them this. ‘You don’t have to have confidence, you just have to be able to understand the basic principles of maths. The more we hate our bodies, the richer these companies get. Ergo, they make us feel bad, in order to make money. Ergo, you do not hate your body because your body is wrong. You hate your body because someone lied to you.’ We believe that the objective truth is that it is a bad thing to be fat. When you realize that is not an objective truth, but rather, someone’s capitalist and very subjective stance, you can begin to let go of the self-hatred.”

  • “It’s called symbolic annihilation. It’s a term coined in 1976 by George Gerbner to describe the absence of representation in the media. Basically: by not being represented at all, it sends the signal that you don’t matter. It’s a method of making sure that we keep oppressing the same groups of people. If, every time we look at a television, everyone who is not a white man feels a bit worse, it helps to maintain the current system: where the white man is in charge of almost everything. Representation is directly connected to self-esteem - one of the most important traits to possess when asserting yourself in the world. It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy - if you believe that you matter more than others, you will place yourself in that position. Likewise, if you feel like you don’t, you will let others assert themselves over you.”

  • “There are more naked and murdered women on television and in films than there are fat women.”

  • “I miss the time I really liked Ricky Gervais, you know, before I learned about his general personality.”

  • Sidenote to me: I have to consciously become less judgmental about what others are wearing. If someone seems happy with their clothing choices, how in the hell is it my business to correct them? Even if it’s only internal thoughts, I don’t want to have them. I feel like if I can actually do this, then I’ll even become more confident with my only choices and less worried what others will think.

  • “God, imagine if - and this goes for not just all people during your teenage years but essentially for all people in the world - imagine if people were just nice to each other.”

  • “Men’s opinions of me are irrelevant. Men’s opinions of you are irrelevant too. Yet we are constantly being fed this idea that it matters.”

  • “There’s an established narrative which says that women have to be thin to be taken seriously, that their worth is based on their fuckability - and so women should be constantly dieting, exercising and chopping up salads in addition to putting on make-up, having a straight fringe, wearing painful heels and expensive perfume and focusing real hard on smiling to everyone but not too much, not enough to be asking for it. They also need to figure out complicated ways of getting home at night in order to not walk through any poorly lit alleyways, and to do reproductive and emotional labor for all the men in their lives. It takes so much hard work, time and effort to be considered an ‘acceptable woman’ that we hardly have time to just exist. We constantly have to reach an impossible standard in order to just be taken a little bit seriously, and you can’t help but wonder if it’s all a trick. If we are meant to be too busy applying lipstick to get involved with politics, business decisions and activism. When women are given the impossible task of ‘get thin and stay thin’, and when this is made the very minimum requirement to receive basic respect, we can see that this is less of a focus on beauty and more of a way of controlling women.”

  • “Apart from having been brainwashed since birth to believe that thinness is the ultimate ideal, I think we also love the idea that we can control our own mortality. So whilst the obsession with weight loss and dieting stems from a need to control women, our personal obsession with it could also be fuelled by our need to just control something.”

  • “A fat activist will ask to be treated with respect and the troll on the internet will say, but what about health? as if being unhealthy somehow removes your right to be treated well.”

  • “The hatred of fat people is not limited to fat people - it is directed at fat in itself. So even if you have one percent body fat, that one percent is something you are meant to hate, even if it does not mean you need two seats on a plane. If everyone decided to take one stab each at the monster that is fatphobia, it would not have to be just up to the fat people to battle it.”

  • “To hug your stomach and to start believing that it is a sexy, beautiful stomach - it feels good. And if you have gone through life being told that you are worthless and undeserving of good things, sometimes good feelings can feel uncomfortable. We need to get over this because this is essential work - you are going to be you forever.”

  • “There is no such thing as failure. You have already been failed by the people you expected to be able to trust. You have already felt guilty enough. You have already blamed yourself enough. Part of the hike towards self-love is reuniting with your body and the instincts you had when you were born. Accepting that you act a certain way, eat a certain way, look a certain way. And that it is all okay. You are okay. And you have always been okay. You only ever tried your best.”

Just such a wonderful book, I can’t recommend it enough.

TAGS: Happy Fat, Sofie Hagen, great book, book review, Liz Heather, books autumn 2020, fatphobia, fat


December 16, 2014

Yes Please By Amy Poehler - A Review

by Liz Heather in Reviews


Available on Amazon

Available on Amazon

Available on Amazon

Available on Amazon

I've been waiting for this book for awhile now and it definitely delivered. The only thing I would change about it would be this: I wish she talked less about how inexperienced she is as a book writer. I'm a big fan of self-deprecation - but I thought that it was too excessive at times. But other than that one thing, this book was fantastic. My favourite parts are ahead.

  • "Nice manners are the secret keys to the universe."
  • "Did you know that when your water breaks the best thing to do is stand up? Your baby acts as a plug. Isn't that insane?"
  • The fact that she allots two blank pages for the reader to write down their own personal "Day I Was Born" story = so kind and too great.
  • "It takes years as a woman to unlearn what you have been taught to be sorry for. It takes years to find your voice and seize your real estate."
  • "Anger and embarrassment are often neighbors. Sometimes we get defensive about what we feel guilty about."
  • She mentions the book The Gift of Fear and made me really want to read it, so that'll have to go on my book list. (Nora Ephron's book Heartburn was also put on that list because of this book - I can't remember where she mentioned it, but it was enough of a mention to make me want to read it.)
  • "A word about apologizing: It's hard to do it without digging yourself in deeper. It's also scary and that's why we avoid the pain. We want so badly to plead our case and tell our story. The bad news is that everybody has a story."
  • In her ninety-year-old self advice paragraph she says to: "Make "No" a complete sentence." (Ugh, I can't tell you how much I love this one.)
  • If there's one chapter you definitely need to read, it's the one describing her two sons (on page 299). Not only does she sound like an amazing mother, but the things that she does with her kids makes me so envious that these little boys get to live the lives that they do. 
  • "The only way we will survive is by being kind. The only way we can get by in this world is through the help we receive from others. No one can do it alone, no matter how great the machines are."

(On that second page scanned up there (with numbers seven through ten) you can see a strand of my hair. Sorry about that, that was an accident. There are strands of my hair all over my apartment and there's nothing I can do about it. My long, luxurious hair wants to seep into every aspect of my life. Apparently it really wanted to be in a blog post, so who am I to stop it? Hope you're not grossed out. And yes, I could have just re-scanned that page, but ugh - re-scanning? Who has the time.)

Anyway, it's a great book. You should definitely read it.

TAGS: Amy Poehler, books, books to read, great book, Liz Heather, Yes Please, book review, Nora Ephron, The Gift of Fear, Heartburn, women, hair, advice, best of Amazon


June 16, 2014

Edison's Ghost Machine

by Liz Heather in Links


Words can't express how incredibly proud I am to know and love the woman, Jennifer Faylor, who penned this book of poetry. I've spoken of her before and I likely will again.

I had the pleasure of previewing Edison's Ghost Machine a few months ago and was startled by the fact that I think I may actually consider myself a poetry fan now. Who knew it could happen? Not only is it beautifully written and memorably poignant - but if you and I have any similar tastes at all, then you'll absolutely feel as strongly as I do about it.

A full review of this book will be the subject of a future post - I'm only mentioning it to you now since it recently became published and available for your fine eyes. You can get a copy on Amazon and there's no reason in hell you shouldn't read it.

TAGS: Jennifer Faylor, Edison's Ghost Machine, Liz Heather, poetry, great book, recommendation