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Download Ebook Why Moms Are Weird, by Pamela Ribon

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Why Moms Are Weird, by Pamela Ribon

Why Moms Are Weird, by Pamela Ribon



Why Moms Are Weird, by Pamela Ribon

Download Ebook Why Moms Are Weird, by Pamela Ribon

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Why Moms Are Weird, by Pamela Ribon

From the acclaimed author of Why Girls are Weird comes a second hilarious and surprising novel about love and family and the weirdo inside us all.

Belinda "Benny" Bernstein doesn't brag about her life in Los Angeles, but she is proud of her independence. She's got a job and a place to live, and she even goes out on dates now and again. But when Benny's mother and sister get into a car accident, she drops everything to fly across the country and help her injured, unemployed mom. The only problem? She wasn't exactly invited -- and back in Virginia she finds herself confronting every issue her family has avoided for years, including her mom's thriving sex life and her sister's wild nightlife.

Benny sets about fixing everything she thinks is broken at home, including mounds of clutter and the personal lives of the women she loves. But she soon stumbles upon a stack of letters that may reveal her mother's darkest secret. Benny only begins to understand her mom when she finds herself in a similar dilemma -- torn between someone she can't have and someone she thinks she shouldn't have. If Benny doesn't sort things out before she's sucked into the family vortex of dysfunction, there's no telling when she'll be able to go home again . . . unless this is home, after all.

  • Sales Rank: #2436101 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-08-01
  • Released on: 2006-08-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.25" h x .70" w x 5.31" l, .58 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 304 pages

From Publishers Weekly
Twenty-seven-year-old Benny Bernstein struggles with her weight, her insecurities and a sinkhole of family love and dysfunction in Ribon's compassionate follow-up to her debut, Why Girls Are Weird. Three years after her father's death, Benny has shed 50 pounds, built a life for herself in Los Angeles and just begun what might be her first successful relationship with hipster Mickey. But a distraught phone call from her mother, who lost her job and broke her leg in a car accident, brings Benny home to Virginia, since her younger sister, Jami, still living at home, can't be relied on. Back east, Benny discovers her mother's house has become an animal shelter, and she has three secret boyfriends and a red-hot sex life at age 53. As if that weren't overwhelming enough, Jami is dating an abusive ex-con. Benny hires a hot handyman to help clean up the house and finds herself enjoying his teases and flirtations while missing Mickey. Between her mother's eccentricities, her sister's stubbornness and her own self-doubt and confusing love life, Benny isn't sure she'll ever be able to return to L.A. Chick lit fans will identify with this kind, imperfect heroine.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
As in her debut novel, Why Girls Are Weird (2003), Ribon's central character is a bouncy and articulate twentysomething struggling to find her niche in the world. Belinda Bernstein, aka Benny, has an art history degree and works in a travel agency in Los Angeles, where she followed her actor boyfriend, who is now out of the picture. When her mother breaks her leg and loses her job, Benny returns to Virginia to help out, abandoning her current boyfriend in the process. There she finds her widowed mother juggling three suitors and Jami, Benny's younger sister, "dating another gangbanger." Benny adds to this manic mix by carrying on a flirtatious relationship with her mother's yardman, who has a master's degree yet sounds like a hillbilly. Another mystery is why Jami keeps going back to her abusive boyfriend. Although several characters remain sketchy, there are lots of humorous moments as Benny attempts to untangle these entwined relationships. Deborah Donovan
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

About the Author
Pamela Ribon is a bestselling author, television writer and performer.  A pioneer in the blogging world, her first novel, Why Girls Are Weird, was loosely based on her extremely successful website pamie.com.  The site has been nominated for a Bloggie in Lifetime Achievement, which makes her feel old. Ribon created the cult sensation and tabloid tidbit Call Us Crazy:  The Anne Heche Monologues, a satire of fame, fandom and Fresno.  Her two-woman show, Letters Never Sent (created with four-time Emmy winner and Jay Leno Show favorite Liz Feldman) was showcased at the 2005 HBO US Comedy Arts Festival in Aspen.  She has been writing in television for the past seven years, in both cable and network, including on the Emmy-award winning Samantha Who? starring Christina Applegate.  Using her loyal Internet fan base, Ribon sponsors book drives for libraries in need.  Over the years, pamie.com has sent thousands of books and materials to Oakland and San Diego, sponsored a Tsunami-ravaged village of schoolchildren, and helped restock the shelves of a post-Katrina Harrison County, Mississippi.  Ribon’s book drive can now be found at DeweyDonationSystem.org, which has sponsored libraries from the Negril School in Jamaica to the Children’s Institute in Los Angeles. 

Most helpful customer reviews

8 of 11 people found the following review helpful.
brilliant!!!
By iluvandygibb
I didn't want this book to end!!! Ms. Ribon brilliantly wove together epiphanous parallels between mother and daughter that were as heartbreaking as they were hilarious. I truly fell in love with these characters and can't wait to read her next novel!!

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
Funny, Unique, and Moving Family Drama
By Rachel Kramer Bussel
Why Moms Are Weird will appeal to anyone who's experienced the infuriating push/pull love/hate relationship between mother and daughter, and Pamela Ribon captures it brilliantly with her narrator Benny, aka "Boobs." She manages to relate the family's history, quirks, and complicated relationships in a way that lets the story naturally unfold. Benny's narration shows us how out of place she's felt within her family, first because of her weight, and later because of living so far away from Virginia, in Los Angeles, and just feeling removed.

In just a few crisp sentences, Ribon captures the heart of maternal criticism, and why it can sting so much:

"The words hit me in waves as I dissect layers of passive-aggressie, backhanded complimenting. I can chip away and chip away, but I'll never stop finding additional ways to be humiliated back into the fetal position." or

"Our fights quickly escalate into yelling. I don't know how she can get me so angry so quickly. When I feel slighted by my mother, when she accuses me of being wrong when I know I'm right, there isn't a decibel loud enough to make me feel relief."

By allowing Benny's mother room to have her say, Ribon allows readers to see how they differ in their memories and intentions. Even when her mother's boyfriend makes an obviously racist remark, Ribon shows how, to his mind, that is not what he intended, and the reader has plenty to mull over as each feisty, headstrong, quirky character battles it out for the supremacy of their point of view.

While we start off hearing all about why Benny hates her mother and might someday kill her, the real story here is one of love, between parents and children, sisters, and friends. It's about Benny finding herself and figuring out who she is both independently of her family, and as a part of them. No character here is a saint; all have major flaws and have made major mistakes, but when push comes to shove (sometimes literally), they're there for each other.

Ribon also shows that nobody else can decide your fate for you. Jami, Benny's sister, repeatedly falls for the most loser guys, the ones who practically have a warning of "will treat you like crap" on them, but Jami likes the drama and goes back for more over and over, and it's both heartbreaking but incredibly honest to watch her family try to cope with her self-destructive behavior.

There is also the matter of Benny's love interests, which Ribon handles with an emotional intensity and insight that's rare. She shows two men who fall hard for Benny, as well as Benny's mixed feelings, and keeps us guessing until the end about what her final decision will be.

Why Moms Are Weird is intensely funny, but underneath the humor, Benny's struggles are relatable, entertaining, and emotionally honest. I look forward to reading more of Ribon's work (next up is Why Girls Are Weird, yes, I started backwards).

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
A totally different read from "Why Girls are Weird"...
By Joanna M
Having read Ribon's first novel -- as well as years of "Television Without Pity" recaps -- I was expecting something in a similar vein. Although "Moms" has the same conversational flow and humorous moments, it delves into more serious (and often unresolved) conflicts with protagonist Belinda "Benny" Bernstein. Like many twenty-somethings, Benny faces tremendous self-esteem issues, largely due to her upbringing. Because of them, she has trouble finding a place for herself in the world...both with family and potential boyfriends, as well as society as a whole.

After returning home to Virginia to help her incapacitated mother, Benny begins trying to solve her problems -- as well as those of her mother and ne'er-do-well younger sister Jami. But as she quickly learns, they don't necessarily *want* her help. As frustrating as it may be, Benny attempts to face up to the fact that some situations must either resolve themselves eventually, or simply continue unraveled as long as her family members permit.

While I didn't enjoy this book as much as "Girls," Ribon's writing style overall makes any book an enjoyable read. I'll be waiting for news of a third book.

See all 19 customer reviews...

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