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Stutterer Interrupted

The Comedian Who Almost Didn't Happen

by Nina G.
ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Nina G bills herself as "The San Francisco Bay Area's Only Female Stuttering Comedian." On stage, she encounters the occasional heckler, but off stage she is often confronted with people's comments toward her stuttering; listeners completing her sentences, inquiring, "Did you forget your name?" and giving unwanted advice like "slow down and breathe" are common. (As if she never thought about slowing down and breathing in her over thirty years of stuttering!)
When Nina started comedy nearly ten years ago, she was the only woman in the world of stand-up who stuttered—not a surprise, since men outnumber women four to one amongst those who stutter and comedy is a male-dominated profession. Nina's brand of comedy reflects the experience of many people with disabilities in that the problem with disability isn't in the person with it but in a society that isn't always accessible or inclusive.
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    • Kirkus

      A debut memoir from a woman who found a unique remedy for the social anxiety caused by her lifelong stuttering. G. isn't the first person in her family to suffer from a disability, she says: "My father was born with hearing loss, as was his father and his father's mother." G.'s hearing was fine, but her stuttering was compounded by dyslexia, both of which became serious problems for her in third grade.Fortunately, her supportive parents were active in ensuring that she had the best instructors that the California educational system could offer. She would go on to graduate from the University of California, Berkeley, and to receive a doctorate in psychology there. At heart, G. is a teacher--she's a community college professor--and she brings that skill to her memoir, detailing, in plain English, the scientific underpinnings of stuttering and how someone with speech difficulties may become, for example, a successful singer: "stuttering is thought to originate from somewhere in the left side of the brain, near the area that produces speech....on the right side of the brain, you have the areas that produce the functions of intonation or singing." G. also writes of her passion for comedy; starting in, she bravely pursued stand-up comedy, and she still relishes performing at open-mike nights in the San Francisco Bay Area. Her often funny, salty, and justifiably angry prose articulates the frustrations that she faced as a stutterer in the "fluent" world, including the irritation of being interrupted during a word block, the psychological impact of being discounted and mocked, and the self-imposition of silence in an effort to make listeners comfortable. Some of the jokes that she includes here may work better in a live setting than then they do on the page, but others are sure to have readers laughing out loud. An edgy, thought-provoking, and informative insider's view of a frequently misunderstood disability.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

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  • English

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