Join Books.org — it's free

Don't Get Me Started by Kate Clinton β€” book cover
Humor, Entertainment Biography, Gay & Lesbian Studies, Comedy, Gay & Lesbian Biographies

Don't Get Me Started

by Kate Clinton
Available on Bookshop Write a review

Books.org participates in affiliate programs including Bookshop.org and the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.

Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

Let's get one thing straight. I'm not. I'm out and proud. When I'm out and it's raining I carry an umbrella. I used to be in but I hate the smell of mothballs. My closet was huge, complete with a foyer, turnstile, a few dead bolts, and a burglar alarm that had to be deactivated before I could even touch the door handle. And then there was the storm door. It wasn't until I had lived and slept with a woman for a year that it occurred to me to ask, "Do you think we're lesbians?" By the way, never come out to your father in a moving vehicle.

Now I've written a book. It's not as easy as it looks. One night, I was working late on my computer when a little message came up on the screen, "You are almost out of memory." Here are my thoughts and observations on everything from gay marriage (Mad Vow Disease) to my morbid fear of mascots (with the exception of the San Diego Chicken). That's all I'm going to say because I don't want to spoil it for you. That's a job for Jesse Helms.

About the Author, Kate Clinton

A self-described fumerist (feminist/humorist), Kate Clinton taught English for eight years before a writing workshop and improvisational class convinced her that her political views deserved a public hearing. She quit teaching, took a job as a window washer, and started her professional stand-up career in 1981, using politics, Catholicism, and her lesbianism as basic themes. She performs one-woman shows across the country and writes columns for the Progressive and the Advocate. She has appeared on Arsenio Hall, Good Morning America, Nightline, CNN, C-Span, and many other places. Although she has four comedy albums to her credit, Don't Get Me Started is her first book.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

From Barnes & Noble

The Barnes & Noble Review
A self-described "fumerist" (feminist/humorist), Kate Clinton taught English for eight years before a writing workshop and an improvisational class convinced her that her political views deserved a public hearing. Enter a stand-up-comedian career with politics, Catholicism, and lesbianism as basic themes and appearances on such shows as Arsenio Hall, Good Morning America, Nightline, CNN, C-Span, and other venues. Having written for the Progressive and the Advocate, a book was a natural progression. Here are her hilarious takes on the many "Kates," from religion (altarKate) and schooling (eduKate) to settling down (domestiKate) to sex (forniKate). You'll laugh at her unique introspection and humorous look at a "cockamamie world out there."

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

The product of an upstate New York Catholic girlhood, Clinton spent eight years teaching English before she took a leave, developed her feminist and lesbian consciousness and began writing. That writing turned into stand-up comedy. Since 1981, Clinton has been performing at festivals, universities and other sites outside the comedy club circuit. This book collects her routines and anecdotes, many of which work as prose, though they clearly would be elevated by performance. In contrast to the mainstream themes of many other comedian's books, Clinton's pointed politics and lesbian frame of reference are showcased here. She chronicles the emergence of gays: "We aren't so much a movement anymore as a niche market waiting to be scratched." Lamenting the programmed world of Disney, she dishes, "Old Walt must have been some kind of control queen." The Gulf War campaign she calls "Operation Just `Cause George Bush Felt Like It.'" Clinton's comedy aims for more than the laughs, however. She recalls giving a great show in one small church basement in the South, with an audience "in desperate need of some news about their lives." And even though Clinton claims to feel "shame and guilt" about doing talk shows, she recalls how one young lesbian said that seeing her on the Maury Povich Show was a consciousness-raising moment and a relief from depression. Author tour. June

Book Details

Published
July 1, 2000
Publisher
Ballantine Books Inc.
Pages
208
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780345430168

More by Kate Clinton

Similar books