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I'm Laughing Because I'm Crying

A Memoir

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From standup comedian Youngmi Mayer, an unforgettable memoir written with "raw, enviable freedom that simply floors you," interrogating whiteness, gender, and sexuality in America, navigating a tumultuous childhood in Korea and Saipan, and coming to terms with her parents' shortcomings (Michelle Zauner).
"Do you know what happens if you laugh while crying? Hair grows out of your butthole." It was a constant truism Youngmi Mayer's mother would say threateningly after she would make her daughter laugh while crying. Her mother used it to cheer her up in moments when she could tell Youngmi was overtaken with grief. The humorous saying would never fail to lighten the mood, causing both daughter and mother to laugh and cry at the same time. Her mother had learned this trick from her mother, and her mother had learned this from her mother before her: it had also helped an endless string of her family laugh through suffering.

In I'm Laughing Because I'm Crying, Youngmi jokes through the retelling of her childhood as an offbeat biracial kid in Saipan, a place next to a place that Americans might know. She jokes through her difficult adolescence where she must parent her own parents: a mother who married her husband because he looked like white Jesus (and the singer of The Bee Gees). And with humor and irreverence and full-throated openness, she jokes even while sharing the story of what her family went through during the last century of colonialism and war in Korea, while reflecting how years later, their wounds affect her in New York City as a single mom, all the while interrogating whiteness, gender, and sexuality.

Youngmi jokes through these stories in hopes of passing onto the reader what her family passed down to her: The gift of laughing while crying. The gift of a hairy butthole. Because throughout it all, the one thing she learned was one cannot exist without the other. And like a yin and yang, this duality is reflected in this whip-smart, heart-wrenching, and disarmingly funny memoir told by a bright new voice with so much heart and wisdom.


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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 2, 2024
      Comedian Mayer blends wit and wisdom in this charming account of growing up biracial in Korea and Saipan, raising a child alone in New York City, and coming to terms with the damages of generational trauma. She begins with an account of her maternal Korean family, from her great-grandmother’s late-19th-century kidnapping by a bachelor (in a Joseon-era custom called bossam) to a rundown of the gallows humor instilled in her mother and grandfather as the family adapted to life in post-colonial Korea. From there, Mayern moves on to her own difficult childhood, characterized by her white father’s depression and her mother’s resentment. After getting an abortion at 20 and realizing the pregnancy brought her “dangerously close to a life of whatever the fuck this was,” Mayer fled Saipan for San Francisco in the 2000s, where she did sex work and gradually built a life for herself. In sharp-witted prose, she describes starting a family in New York City, leaving her partner, and pursuing her moonshot dream of becoming a stand-up comedian, framing each step as a move away from inherited cycles of hurt. Throughout, she’s unsparing but refreshingly empathetic, especially toward her parents. This heralds the arrival of a promising new voice. Agent: Jessica Mileo, InkWell Management.

    • Booklist

      September 15, 2024
      In Mayer's eyes, humor in the face of life's cruelty is a defining feature of Korean culture. It was one of her main coping mechanisms during childhood and helped her launch a second career as a comedian and performer. Mayer runs through her family legacy and modern Korean history with a blunt, edgy tone more suited to stand-up--punchlines that could be invigorated from the energy of a live performance often fall short. Though she analyzes some of the major historical trends that shaped her family and Korean society as a whole--namely the 20th century Japanese and American occupations--her conclusions often lean on standard platitudes. The memoir works best when she lasers in on the quirks and coping mechanisms that make up her specific family relationships. Indeed, the most compelling insights come from Mayer's young adult life, as her marriage and business partnership coincide with the rise of social media and foodie culture. For readers searching for Asian memoirs, Mayer offers a useful and accessible viewpoint.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      October 15, 2024
      A Korean American stand-up comic, influencer, and podcaster shares her story, and her rage. Early in her provocative and passionate memoir, Mayer explains that she feels she can speak about being Asian with more confidence than other Asian American comics because she was raised in Asia. The daughter of a Korean mother and a white American father, she was born in the U.S., grew up in Seoul and Saipan, then at the age of 20 ran away from her family and her oppressive then-boyfriend, landing first in San Francisco. She met and married the celebrity chef Danny Bowien; moved to New York and had a child; became quite wealthy; lost it all. The best parts of Mayer's memoir are where she explains aspects of Korean history and culture, including painful subjects like the country's relationship with Japan and international adoption. She presents terms and concepts in Hanjul characters as well as in transliteration and vibrantly weaves them into her story: for example, nunchi, which is the Korean way of knowing what you're supposed to do in any situation (her white father did not), andwangtutta, the lowest of losers (herself, at school). It's easy to predict that the woman behind theHairy Butthole podcast is not worried about offending people, and that is certainly true. Whether or not you fall into one of the groups Mayer scorns--white, American, male, rich, Japanese, liberal, and more--buckle your seat belts. She heaps on the generalizations, extreme irony, profanity, and fury. According to her bio, she is "one of the rare comedians working today who has obtained success both on online platforms and in the mainstream," which suggests that lumping people into categories and making proclamations about them works better in stand-up than it does on the page. If you can tolerate the use of words as a blunt instrument, this challenging book has a lot to say.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      November 1, 2024

      Recounting her childhood in Saipan and her present life in New York City as a single mom, comedian and podcaster Mayer writes a memoir laced with humor and history. She interrogates race, gender, and sexuality while also sharing the traumatic repercussions of colonialism and war that her Korean family experienced. With a 75K-copy first printing. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Youngmi Mayer is a Korean American woman who lived in Saipan and South Korea before moving to America. Here she narrates her memoir of growing up between cultures and encountering a rough start to life in the U.S. Mayer's sense of humor is self-deprecating, sometimes veering into self-abusive. She is alternately funny yet, at the same time, extremely critical to the point of harshness. Mayer discusses Korean culture, the value of assimilation, and Korean concepts like nunchi, which she defines as a type of emotional intelligence involving doing the right thing at the right time without being told. Korean language is sprinkled throughout the text along with translations. Mayer is opinionated, with some controversial views. S.E.G. © AudioFile 2024, Portland, Maine

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