Available Formats
The End of the World Notwithstanding: Stories I Lived to Tell
By (Author) Janna L. Goodwin
Travelers' Tales, Incorporated
Travelers' Tales, Incorporated
22nd June 2021
United States
General
Non Fiction
Memoirs
Autobiography: arts and entertainment
Autobiography: general
Gender studies: women and girls
Media, entertainment, information and communication industries
Travel writing
812.6
Paperback
208
Width 127mm, Height 177mm
Broad target audience, including young and old fans of Mike Birbiglia, David Sedaris, Samantha Irby, Julia Sweeney and Scott Carpenteranyone who enjoys armchair travel and/or comedic memoirreaders able to recognize, embrace and poke fun at their Inner Alarmistand perhaps, especially, readers who live along the Front Range or anywhere in the Rocky Mountain West, where Janna lives, and where several of the stories take place. In the midst of cultural transformation, social unrest and a global health crisis: grounded levity, uplifting-yet-thoughtful stories, and a sense of perspective are all appealing if not necessary. While the book is humor, and does not explicitly address current events, Jannas voice is feminist, socially-aware, cognizant of and sensitive to issues of race, gender and class, and readers should discover currents and undercurrents highly pertinent to our turbulent times. Multiple websites that appeal to a reading public have posted articles, since February, 2020, extolling uplifting books. From bookriot.com and getliterary.com to today.com and goodhouskeeping.com, uplifting and inspirational books have been featured and promoted since COVID-19 started. Fans of Jannas work may have seen her performance of some of these stories during the brief tour of the solo piece (You Are Reminded That Your Safety Is Your Own ResponsibilityIn terms of authors circles readers: Janna is a professor of Communication at Regis University, with a community of approximately 775 faculty and over 2,300 students; shes also on faculty in the Mile High MFA writing program. She has taught there for sixteen years and, including former majors and advisees, participates in an alumni network of around 1,600; she can also call up a community from her former graduate program at the University of Massachusetts.
Wonderfully detailed, every word the right word, this book is a genuine keeper. Kirkus Reviews ***Starred Review*** I havent laughed so much since David Sedariss Me Talk Pretty One Day. Janna Goodwin is the human wrecking ball of fun. David Hicks, author of White Plains: A Novel The only writer who can make Nietzsche seem funny. Gary Buslik, author of A Rotten Person Travels the Caribbean This wild memoir is excruciatingly honest, hilarious in its Chaplinesque escapades, and deliberate in the suspenseful nature of each story. I found myself yelling at the pages, not wanting her to make that choice, or at least look over her shoulder. As she so precisely describes our learned performances of cheerful compliance, Goodwin exposes a vulnerable humility and belief in human goodness that to some could appear nave, but to me conveys the strength of a Zen Master. She never rages against her abusers, against the weather, or the drunken driver. Instead, she reflects on the rich complexity of life and the deliciousness of being able to live inside it. This book is a beauty. Fay Simpson, author of The Lucid Body This is the only book I want to read, again and again, for the rest of 2021. Janna Goodwin has succeeded in writing the Best Book of the Year without even trying. There is a philosophical destination here, but the road to that destination is forever and wonderfully forking. I was thrilled to be carried along for the ride. And what message do we need more urgently these days than to laugh at ourselves at the height of our anxiety, that the best we can possibly do is to say Oh wellha! to everything, and to be reminded that we will, someday soon, be eating peaches again David Hicks, author of White Plains: A Novel Goodwin spins a comedic memoir that mines the absurdity of human experience, offering readers profound moments of insight. Because of her sensibilityself-deprecating and quirky, self-aware and intelligentI would follow her anywhere. Suzanne Roberts, author of Bad Tourist: Misadventures in Love and Travel Decades ago, new to San Francisco, broke but needing adventure, I began to surreptitiously follow and eavesdrop on street people who muttered aloud, explaining and justifying their lives to themselves and an invisible audience. I found a significant percentage of them to be perfectly lucid, often employing a word-perfect prose bordering on poetry. Those voices came back to me as I read this captivating, trance-inducing memoir. Goodwin exorcises painful chapters of her own past, whileand here lies her geniuscommanding guffaw after guffaw from the reader, yet never diminishing the gravity of her stories. Brad Newsham, author of Take Me With You Janna Goodwins writing voice is so clear, so candid, and so self-deprecating, its hard to believe shes not sitting in front of you as you read her stories. Theyre not always easy, theyre full of doubt and some genuinely bad decisions, but they are so very human. She wanders a lot, as people do when they tell a story, but you want to go along for the entire ride. Pam Mandel, author of The Same River Twice Janna L. Goodwin's true stories lie somewhere between a memoir and a literary travelogue and reflect not just on adventure, but the life lessons they bring. It creates a journey that appeals on many different levels with a series of stories designed to entertain, educate, and delight. Each story holds the opportunity for readers to stay on edge not about the journey, but its ultimate impact and promise of change. Goodwin writes with a wry humor and insight that sets it apart from the usual travelogue. Midwest Book Review
Janna L. Goodwin teaches in the Communication department and the Mile High MFA program at Regis University in Denver, Colorado. She grew up in Wyoming, performed improv comedy for a few years with Moving Violations and other groups in the Los Angeles area, andafter living for a year in Francestudied theatre at the National Shakespeare Conservatory in New York. She earned her BA in Film and Music from Hampshire College and her doctoral degree in Communication from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Her plays have been produced by independent theatre companies on the East Coast and in Colorado. She has created and directed ensemble comedies for many years, including The House Not Touched by Death (Pilgrim Theatre Collective; the Ko Festival of Performance) and Just Pretend Everything Is Perfectly Normal (Playwright Theatre). Her most recent solo show, You Are Reminded That Your Safety is Your Own Responsibility, premiered at the United Solo Theatre Festival in New York, toured a bit, and provided the original material for this, her first book.