Linda Holmes is an author and host of NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour.
My friend Pam’s memoir NOTES TO BOYS is the basis for this Oscar-shortlisted animated short, MY YEAR OF DICKS, which she also wrote. It is funny and sweet and I encourage you to watch it. It’s right there on Vimeo! A click away! https://t.co/YfPNBoVJXn
4 authors, 3 judges, 2 finalists & 1 champion. In 69 cities worldwide. Created by @atzuniga. Watch LDM Book Report: https://t.co/2d55uVzUEp…
Time to head on over to @indiebound and scoop up books from last night's judges & host. @pamelaribon's Notes to Boys: And Other Things I Shouldn't Share in Public @emilyvgordon's Super You: Release Your Inner Superhero @atzuniga's Collision Theory MASTERPIECES, ALL. https://t.co/AIqRXzWVqR
One of The Hairpin's 15 books to read now
A Hello Giggles Item of the Day
"...what makes the book so good is that Grown-up Pam has enormous affection for Little Pam, who is, like a little sister, horribly embarrassing on the one hand and a fiercely protected loved one on the other. It's a collection of embarrassing stories and mortifying notes, yes, but it's also a pretty deeply felt memoir about her introduction to boys and sex and--perhaps most painfully--learning when not to tell people how you feel."
--Linda Holmes, NPR Monkey See and NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour
Imaginative children of the 1980s and '90s will likely see themselves in Ribon's writing, as will like-minded teens today.
--Booklist
"...I enjoyed the book, and I rooted for [Little Pam]...hang around for the payoff."
--Tiffany Turpin Johnson, LitReactor
Praise for Pamela Ribon:
"Ribon's steadfastness in this character's lack of likability is admirable. She never panders by making Smidge somehow have some kind of epiphany of character simply because she is dying. Ribon is unwavering in what she shows us of Smidge and the novel is the better for it."
--Roxane Gay, author of Bad Feminist on Smidge from You Take It From Here
"...a book with all the elements I love: best friends, "found" families, Ribon's trademark humor and vivid writing (the description of Smidge's cancerous cough is heart-stopping)."
--Jennifer Weiner, author of Good In Bed and The Next Best Thing
"You Take It From Here is ... like a planetarium, where what matters is the feeling of the whole... You get to the end... and you have that sense that you've heard a whole story that seemed to be about skin-and-bones people, to the point where part of you is still worrying about them, like they're phantom limbs."
--Linda Holmes, NPR
"Don't let the cover ... fool you: ... the story that unfolds is anything but just another chick lit beach read. Ribon has undoubtedly made you laugh in the past... but with You Take It From Here, she will make you cry. Buckets."
--Danielle Turchiano, Made Possible By Pop Culture
"You Take It From Here was my first experience with author Pamela Ribon, but it won't be my last. She has a wry sense of humor, a unique way of putting words together, and even managed to write a humorous book about a dying wife and mother."
--Books and Movies
"If the standard of a good book is the emotions it conveys, the thoughts it sparks, and the way you find it touching your life after you close the pages, because the story sits with you (and I think it is), then this book is more than good. It is spectacular."
--FromTracie.com
"One of those rare books where the characters feel like your best friends from the first page. You'll laugh and cry as Pamela Ribon takes you on a colorful, rich and unforgettable journey of friendship."
--Kristin Harmel, author of The Sweetness of Forgetting
"Hilarity and heartbreak compete, but ultimately hope wins in this thoroughly delightful story about what it means to be a woman, a mother, a best friend. I can't wait to pass this book along to every woman who ever mattered to me. Pamela Ribon has a huge, fresh voice, and this is her best book yet."
--Joshilyn Jackson, New York Times bestselling author of Gods in Alabama and A Grown-Up Kind of Pretty
"I giggled, I laughed, I got all angry and emo--and once I made sure no one was looking--I cried."
--The Readers Cafe