Hunger Makes Me a Modern Girl
By Carrie Brownstein
By Carrie Brownstein
By Carrie Brownstein
By Carrie Brownstein
By Carrie Brownstein
Read by Carrie Brownstein
By Carrie Brownstein
Read by Carrie Brownstein
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$17.00
Oct 25, 2016 | ISBN 9780399184765
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Oct 27, 2015 | ISBN 9781101599549
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Oct 27, 2015 | ISBN 9780399565397
425 Minutes
-
$17.00
Oct 25, 2016 | ISBN 9780399184765
-
Oct 27, 2015 | ISBN 9781101599549
-
Oct 27, 2015 | ISBN 9780399565397
425 Minutes
Buy the Audiobook Download:
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Praise
âIn the vast library of recent rock memoirs⊠Ms. Brownsteinâs may be the one that most nakedly exposes its authorâs personality.ââThe New York Times
âCarrie Brownstein writes the way she plays guitar, with raw honesty, passion, and great humor in Hunger Makes Me a Modern Girl.ââVanity Fair
âA memoir thatâs both candid and brave, and a powerful tribute to the power of music to heal, to connect, to break you down and then make you whole againâŠâŠBrownsteinâs music has always helped people feel like they really do belong somewhere, and her wonderful memoir does the same thing.â â NPR
âMeet your fierce and funny new comrade-in-arms. [Brownstein] takes us on a backstage tour of her life, from quirky kid-dom to angsty teen-dom to the feminist subculture of the riot grrl scene to not quite superstardom⊠Chronicling Sleater-Kinneyâs tumultuous history and her own volatility â the tours that electrified fans, one brutal, ballsy concert at a time; the anxiety that often plagued herâBrownstein illuminates the euphoric highs and crushing lows of a life spent both on the fringes and in the spotlight.ââO, The Oprah Magazine
â[Hunger Makes Me a Modern Girl] is earnest, endearing, at times angry, critical, confessional, raw⊠[itâs] the compelling chronicle of a born performer, from fandom to stardom⊠The richness of the writing ensures that Hunger will satisfy die-hard Sleater-Kinney fans as well as those whoâve never heard a note.â âKirkus Reviews
âBrownstein is as nimble, articulate, and honest a writer of literary nonfiction as she is a musician, actress, and cultural critic.ââVogue.com
âA sharp, emotionally intimate new memoir.ââPeople
â[Brownsteinâs] honesty is disarming, and buoyed by the same dry wit that makes her scenester-lacerating IFC series Portlandia so good. Thatâs how she artfully manages to transcend the backstage tropes of the rock-bio genre, and why Hunger should become the new handbook for every modern girl (and yes, boys, too) looking for the courage to pursue a life less ordinary.â âEntertainment Weekly
âA stand out memoir⊠A journey to self-possession and a portrait of an era.â âVogue
âShe can play, but man, can Carrie Brownstein writeâŠHer blazing memoir is lit by the same flair for adventure, fearless inquiry, and honesty that mark her gritty licks and trenchant vocals.ââELLE
âHunger doesnât try to enumerate every hat sheâs ever worn, only what emboldened her to keep experimenting.ââTIME Magazine
âSolid musings from the Portlandia star/feminist punk hero.â âCosmopolitan
âBrownstein in an American indy culture avatar â funny, smart and always on point.â âLos Angeles Times
âBrownsteinâs writing is strongest when she describes the passion and sheer joy she experiences connecting with music.â âBUST Magazine
â(Brownstein) peels away any residual glamor and mythology of the Riot Grrrl movement and tells her tale of suburban upbringing and liberation.ââNewsweek
âModern Girl offers a stark look at the strain that touring life took on Brownstein; she talks openly about her battles with depression and anxiety, including a difficult-to-read account of her nervous breakdown, which ultimately ended the band.ââPaper Magazine
âLife on tour isnât all rock ânâ roll fantasy, as Sleater-Kinney icon and Portlandia cocreator Carrie Brownstein attests in her corrosively honest, impossible-to-put-down memoir, Hunger Makes Me a Modern Girlâboth a journey to self-possession and a portrait of an era, as indelible as one of her songs.ââVogue.com
âIn her new memoir, [Brownstein] tells the story of how she found salvation in music.â âOut Magazine
âTo find her calling, Carrie is going to experience hard work, sacrifice, and independence that makes her thrive.â âBuzzfeed
âRevealing and raw.â âThe Daily Beast
âFew reign power and femininity like Brownstein whose haunting vocals and soul punching lyrics leave listeners rattled, in a good way, the way only truly great music can â something Hunger Makes Me a Modern Girl is bound to do as well.â âBustle
â[Brownstein] is an incredible observer, with a gift for phrases and imagery and making sense of memory⊠itâs not hard to predict that Brownsteinâs book will go beyond the usual rock-star victory-lap and turn out to be one of the wisest and most poignant memoirs in quite a while.ââSalon
â[A] moving story about Brownsteinâs life before, during, and after the rise of Americaâs greatest rock band.â âFlavorwire
âBrownstein writes with an impressive level of self-awareness and wry humor, even when sheâs tackling difficult moments in her life.â âRefinery29
âThe Sleater-Kinney guitarist, writer, and Portlandia and Transparent actress has always been curiously eloquent. That quality has become obvious over the course of eight albums with bandmates Corin Tucker and Janet Weiss⊠and now in her refreshingly forthright new memoir, Hunger Makes Me a Modern Girl.ââSPIN
âBrownsteinâs Modern Girl offers a lot of value for a wide range of readers. Music historians get a first-hand POV of one of punk rockâs most interesting scenes, aspiring artists will take away Brownsteinâs mandatory perspective and casual readers get a damn fine read.ââPaste Magazine
âSleater-Kinney guitarist Carrie Browstein debunks the nostalgic clichĂ©s of rock-star life on the road. Instead, she candidly recounts the panic attacks and stress-induced shingles she experienced on tour.â âThe Cut
âHunger is a testament to the fact that the transient and permanent are, in fact, intertwined.ââThe Jewish Daily Forward
âSleater-Kinneyâs Carrie Brownstein will make you laugh and cry in Hunger Makes Me a Modern GirlâŠA hunger to be noticed, a hunger to perform and a hunger to be loved are clear motivators for Brownstein as she looks back on her childhood at the start of her entirely self-written and often funny book.â âNY Daily News
âEngrossing⊠For fans of Sleater-Kinney, itâs immensely compelling, particularly because Brownstein writes crisply, insightfully, and without vanity⊠Brownsteinâs memoir shows that she can keep a secret. More important, it shows how compelling she is when she opens up.ââThe A.V. Club
â[Brownsteinâs] writing is sharp, erudite, and witty, and it makes Hunger my favorite music memoir since Just Kids⊠[it] arrives at a moment of unprecented reverence for the feminist rock memoir.â âPitchfork
âCarrie Brownstein is the legendary guitarist in Sleater-Kinney, one-half of the comedic genius team responsible for âPortlandiaâ and, now, in a move that surprises no one, a brilliant memoirist.â âSpectrum
âSleater-Kinney guitarist and âPortlandiaâ co-creator Carrie Brownsteinâs reflections on performance and community will move and shake you.â âHuffington Post
âBrownsteinâs a great writer and Hunger is a smooth, electric read. She carries a lot of humor and gentle self-deprecation throughout the work.ââConsequence of Sound
âHonest and irreverent, Brownstein shows herself to be a talented rock journalist and memoirist without losing the intelligence and humor her fans have come to expect.ââNordstrom Blog The Thread
âSometimes itâs nice to love a band just for their songs, without concern for their backstory, but when you get a chance to know where one of your all-time favorites comes from, and written in such a way where it feels like youâve dived into a pool and like a cartoon, the whole world changes around you, it would be a crime not to indulge. Spend some time with Carrie, itâll be totally worth your while.ââLenny Letter
âCarrie strikes a great balance of fond reminiscing and truthful (sometimes regretful) memories spent on the road, in the recording studio and moments of humility in her youth.ââAfterEllen
â[Brownsteinâs] memoir, looking back on those formative years with the band, offers the kind of intimacy and insight fans and enthusiasts will eagerly devour.ââBiographile
âThis portrait of a life lived above the realm of daily concern may be accurate if youâre a Rolling Stone or Beyonce, but the truth, for most moderately successful musicians, is that rock ânâ roll is mostly about hard work, uncomfortable sleeping arrangements, and a lot of carrying your own instruments. Which is why Carrie Brownsteinâs new memoir, about her years with the band Sleater-Kinney, is so welcome.ââBiographile
âWhat would it be like if all your dreams come true? For Carrie Brownstein, who grew up in the Riot Grrrl movement in the Pacific Northwest, they did: She started out playing in countless punk bands until settling on one with her BFF and romantic partner, Corin Tucker, which they eventually turned into the best rock band of all time, Sleater-Kinney. In Hunger Makes Me a Modern Girl, Brownstein recounts her time before worldwide fame, what Riot Grrrl meant to her as a young woman searching for her voice, and how rock ânâ roll saved her life.ââCosmopolitan.com
âIn this dynamic memoir, Sleater-Kinneyâs Carrie Browstein tells her story of coming up through the 1990s feminist punk scene of the Pacific Northwest. Her portrait is vivid, transporting readers back to the intimate moments that sowed her own roots, and made her the cool-girl icon she is today. Brownstein is honest, funny, and, well, everything you want her to be.â âBustle
âCarrie Brownstein is brilliant and hilarious in Portlandia, and iconic as the singer for punk-rock band Sleater-Kinney, but her memoir Hunger Makes Me A Modern Girl reveals a more raw and vulnerable side to her.â âBustle
âFrom her rocky childhood to becoming part of the feminist punk-rock movement to her days as a comedic writer and actor, Brownstein brings us into the most intimate moments of her life.ââFirst Slice
âFor decades, the guitarist for the legendary Sleater-Kinney has been celebrated for her unapologetic queer politics and general bad-assery. When she became the co-creator and star of the IFC comedy series âPortlandia,â we were introduced to her slippery wit as well. Her new memoir unveils a third Brownstein: a melancholy, intellectually rigorous introvert whoâs been musically unpacking the concept of family ever since her suburban Washington childhood fell apart.â âWordandFilm.com
âBrownstein has written an absolute love letter to music, a gift to Sleater Kinney fans, and above all, an expertly crafted memoir.ââLambda Literary
âBrownstein has insightful things to say about growing up with a closeted gay dad and an anorexic mom, about how the creative process works, about the âperformanceâ of the audience at a concert, about the punk aesthetic.ââNewsday
âA performer through and through, she translates her story to the page with characteristically blunt humor and observational prowess.â âVillage Voice
âBrownstein is both an icon of pop culture and an astute observer of it.â âThe Boston Globe
âCarrie Brownsteinâs local history as part of Sleater-Kinney is, for many of us, our ownâand she has long been an articulate and funny and intelligent voice behind piercing guitar that left tatters behind.ââWillamette Week
âBrownstein has a story to tell, and it doesnât include satirical sketches about a certain element of local culture⊠What Brownstein does instead is open a window into her turbulent, creative Northwest life.ââThe Oregonian
âFor Sleater-Kinney fans, [Hunger Makes Me a Modern Girl] is an absolute must⊠The author writes focused and uncluttered prose, choosing the best, most telling details, as she recounts stories that show what it means to perform for the first time and what it means for a woman to be both a fan and a star in a staunchly male-dominated world. âŠItâs revealing and riveting. On the page as in her songs, Brownstein finds the right words to give shape to experience.ââKirkus starred review
âA candid look at life in rock and roll in a deeply personal and revealing narrative of her life in music, as ardent fan, pioneering female guitarist, comedic performer on TVâs Portlandia, and luminary in the independent rock world.â âPublishers Weekly
â[Brownsteinâs] memoir delivers on all counts, offering a sharp-eyed tale of a singular time in music and culture⊠A strong, engaging pop culture memoir: personal detail, a little dish, and a well-written look at what made the music, and the culture that spawned it, matter.â âLibrary Journal starred review
âBrownstein flips easily from brainy ruminations on nostalgia, fandom, and record labels to trenchant stories about sexism, music journalism, and how a soy allergyânot drugs or alcoholâbrought her to her knees on tour⊠her vivid Sleater-Kinney stories and descriptions of their albums are downright irresistible. Sleater-Kinney fans went nuts late last year when the trio broke their years-long hiatus, and Brownsteinâs memoir will give them more to salivate over.ââBooklist
â[Brownstein] looks back with a healthy balance of romanticism, critique, and humor⊠she has talent⊠Her writing is super solid, at times even gripping⊠You donât need to be a superfan to appreciate someoneâs well-told story about the inherent joy and strife that comes with being in a band; a personâs story about finding, then losing, then re-finding her destiny.ââElectric Literature
âBrownstein has a gift for describing how collaboration works. Sheâs got a clear critical grasp of how the push and pull between her and vocalist-guitarist Corin Tucker and the essential talents of drummer Janet Weiss made the powerful, abrasive, addictive music of Sleater-Kinney. And to that she adds an important personal perspective.ââLos Angeles Times
âDeftly woven narrativeâŠ.A brisk and fascinating work.â âFlavorwire
âA document of self-actualization⊠[Brownsteinâs] writing is measured, dispassionate, and well considered; itâs engaging for exactly those reasons. Her insight is some of the best on that era and subset of punk thatâs been written.â âJezebel
âDeeply felt and smartly unpackedâŠEssential readingâŠOne of the best rock memoirs anyone is going to read in quite some time.ââAustin American Statesman
âHer honesty is disarming, and buoyed by the same dry wit that makes her scenester-lacerating IFC series Portlandia so good. Thatâs how she artfully manages to transcend the backstage tropes of the rock-bio genre, and why Hunger should become the new handbook for every modern girl (and yes, boys, too) looking for the courage to pursue a life less ordinary.ââEntertainment Monthly
âOn the page, Brownstein comes across as funny, charming, self-deprecating and self-aware.â âWilliamette Week
âItâs Brownsteinâs ability to recount her decorous punk life that blazes through. Itâs as if sheâs sitting across from the reader sharing a friendly cup of coffee, bringing you up to speed on her latest musical adventures.â âSlug Magazine
âIs there anything [Brownstein] canât do and do brilliantly?â âCuepoint