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And the Heart Says Whatever Paperback – May 4, 2010


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Essays by former editor of Gawker.com—and the new female voice of her generation. In And the Heart Says Whatever, Emily Gould tells the truth about becoming an adult in New York City in the first decade of the twenty-first century, alongside bartenders, bounty hunters, bloggers, bohemians, socialites, and bankers. These are essays about failing at pet parenthood, suspending lust during the long moment in which a dude selects the perfect soundtrack from his iTunes library, and leaving one life behind to begin a new one (but still taking the G train back to visit the old one sometimes).

For everyone who has ever had a job she wishes she didn't, felt inchoate ambition sour into resentment, ended a relationship, regretted a decision, or told a secret to exactly the wrong person, these stories will be achingly familiar. At once a road map of what not to do and a document of what's possible, this book heralds the arrival of a writer who decodes the new challenges of our post-private lives, and the age-old intricacies of the human heart.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

On the strength of an exposé she wrote for the New York Times Magazine two years ago about her experience working at Gawker.com, Gould, hailing from Silver Spring, Md., and now in her late 20s, delivers a series of 11 insipid essays about her uninspired youth and general lack of motivation or talent for various jobs she took after moving to New York City. The writing seems intentionally bland, as if Gould is attempting to be blasé. At age 17, as she describes in Flower, she and her suburban friends listened to Liz Phair because the singer gave us permission to do stupid things and consider them adventures; in Gould's case, she deflowered a 14-year-old boy from the swim team, knowing her boyfriend would hear about it. She doesn't get into the artsiest Ivy as per plan (I was neither smart nor exceptional), but attends her safe (unvisited) choice, Kenyon, from which she drops out and moves to New York. Among other gigs, she works as a waitress for a sad-sack music bar and as a receptionist for a large, commercial publishing house (I felt silly for being shocked by the quality of what made it through). At Gawker, she became practiced at scanning a room or a page and isolating the appropriate things to hate. Desultory anecdotes of breakup and dating ensue, leaving the reader more confounded than moved. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Former Gawker editor Gould turns a sharp eye on her own life in 11 essays about her childhood, brief collegiate career in Ohio, and eventual move to New York. The perceptiveness and instinctive talent for spotting and exploiting weakness that elevated Gould at Gawker and made her so controversial carry the book. In the queasy traditions of eviscerating memoirs and plain old gossip, there is an element of callousness even in the tenderest moments she describes with former lovers and friends, making it impossible not to wonder what their reaction to this collection will be. Gould outs her affair at 17 with a 14-year-old, a few awkward years at Kenyon College, various affairs in New York, and a stint as a shot girl at a seedy bar. Gould also discusses her time at Gawker, describing how she covered parties, scanning the room for someone or something to mock. Readers will expect the book, given Gould’s record and reputation, to be salacious but instead it comes off as rather pedestrian. --Katherine Boyle

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Free Press; 1st edition (May 4, 2010)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 224 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1439123896
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1439123898
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 7.1 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.5 x 0.6 x 8.5 inches
  • Customer Reviews:

About the author

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Emily Gould
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Emily Gould is an author, journalist and the co-founder of a feminist publishing startup, Emily Books. She has written extensively for publications including the New York Times, London Review of Books, Guardian, The Economist, Slate and Jezebel, and since 2005 has run a popular blog at emilymagazine.com. She is the author of a collection of essays, And the Heart Says Whatever, and Friendship is her debut novel.

Customer reviews

3.8 out of 5 stars
45 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the humor candid and funny, with subtlety and dead-on observations. They also describe the writing style as lovely and not squeamish. Readers love the emotional content as candid and offhandedly funny. They describe the book as a great read.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

6 customers mention "Humor"6 positive0 negative

Customers find the humor candid, cute, and witty. They appreciate the subtlety and dead-on observations.

"...physical descriptions of people, in particular, are so refreshing and funny." Read more

"...considered it, as Gould is a wonderfully talented writer with a sharp wit and good mind...." Read more

"...Cute witty and easily relate-able for any female, especially a fellow New York female trying to make it happen as a journalist/writer...." Read more

"...I really loved it. Ms. Gould is a lovely writer, very funny and not squeamish about being honest in her portrayal of real-life characters." Read more

5 customers mention "Writing style"5 positive0 negative

Customers find the writing style lovely, funny, and not squeamish.

"...and she shouldn't be punished for it because, again, the writing is GOOD...." Read more

"...Gould's writing is blended with a confessional lyrically styled prose, originating from her keen sense of self awareness and observation where she..." Read more

"...the full 5 stars but seriously considered it, as Gould is a wonderfully talented writer with a sharp wit and good mind...." Read more

"...And the Heart Says Whatever is well-written and Emily comes across as open and vulnerable...." Read more

3 customers mention "Emotional content"3 positive0 negative

Customers find the book candid and funny.

"...I think that this is so true. At times, Emily is painfully honest -- about heartbreak, addiction, and the overall sadness of coming into true..." Read more

"...Ms. Gould is a lovely writer, very funny and not squeamish about being honest in her portrayal of real-life characters." Read more

"I loved this book for her candid and offhandedly funny way of looking at her life. I've read it twice already, and plan to re-read it over and over." Read more

3 customers mention "Reading experience"3 positive0 negative

Customers find the book a great read.

"...The book is infinitely readable and the characters ring true. I'm planning to read every book she writes going forward...." Read more

"Awesome and funny..." Read more

"Great read...." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on June 10, 2010
Gould had me at "the squared-off globes of his ass," a description of the 14-year-old boy she slept with when she was 17. What I like most about this book is that the writer is honest. We all think the kinds of things she thinks; we're just too afraid to say them because we want everybody to like us. I think most of the criticism of this book has to do with the writer's job at Gawker, not the writer herself. But even the critics have to admit that they, too, want to be part of something cool, part of something important, as Emily did back when she started working there. It takes a lot for a writer to admit these things to strangers, and she shouldn't be punished for it because, again, the writing is GOOD. The physical descriptions of people, in particular, are so refreshing and funny.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2024
I had read a story about Emily Gould when she was editor of Gawker. and for better or worse, I thought she was so cool! The image of her in bed with her laptop was seared in my brain. Then I read this book where she reflected pn those days and I absolutely ate it up. So I recently read an excerpt from her latest book about almost breaking up with Keith Gessen, I mean divorcing. I’m glad you stayed. It’s hard not to divorce when you think the other person is better at what you do, and it happens but Emily, he is NOT better!

Ketih Gessen and Ben Kunkel are of a slightly older and different generation when books were old school.
Compared to Keith, no offense I like his stuff okay but you are a ray of sunshine and hip to new changes of technology which you play with beautifully. It’s so fun and the last thing I want to do is depress him but Keith with all his talents can be heavy while you are a bright spark and a major writer of today! Even if ‘And the Heart Says Whatever” were your only book, you are a major, major writer or you wouldn’t be in the Farrar, Strass and Giroux email newsletter at such length…I loved that excerpt, too! Stop me if you know this but(I may have reviewed this book here before but came here to say this:)
Please take from Mika Brezienski, if you don’t know her book, ‘Know Your Worth’! And kids, too? Omg! Love
and maybe you and Keith are great complements to each other, I’d say. I didn’t know you were a couple. I’m thinking of the Brownings, a great love affair depicted in Possession by A.S. Byatt whose 1st novel? At 52 yo.
Reviewed in the United States on April 14, 2015
After loving Gould's book Friendship, I found her memoir/short story collection to be "meh." I enjoy her writing, and I'd read her next novel, but this one just didn't cut it for me.
Reviewed in the United States on May 28, 2011
The cover of this book alone would have drawn me to it, had I passed by it in my local Barnes and Noble. It's beautiful in its simplicity. However, this was on my List of Books to Read in my Blackberry, so I ordered it without looking into what it was about, trusting my list-making abilities and buying blindly. This turned out to be in my favor.

Emily Gould, who has written for The New York Times, The New York Observer, and Jezebel.com has a voice that I can't closely relate to anyone else's that I have read before. There were times when the sharpness of her words made me think of old books that I have read by authors who are both witty and sad; and this book is sort of dark in its humor and even darker in its reality.

Jonathan Franzen, an American novelist and essayist, writes about Gould's book:

This is not a `nice' book, but it comes by its anger and melancholy honestly, and it makes sense of much that is puzzling about our cultural moment.

I think that this is so true. At times, Emily is painfully honest -- about heartbreak, addiction, and the overall sadness of coming into true adulthood in a city that doesn't care about your failures or achievements. The years of smoking pot, the years of a failing relationship with a man she loved deeply, and the years of moving forward and upward (and sometimes backward) in her career -- it's all here, within these pages.

I wouldn't call this memoir a page-turner. It is, essentially, a group of eleven essays that tell a story of sorts, with pieces here or there that make sense over time. However, even though I didn't feel the push of the pages beckoning me forward, the intense honesty of this book was enough to keep me interested, and the reader really does cheer on Emily Gould as she tells about years of self-discovery -- you want so badly for her to find love, find a place for herself in the world, and find peace. I think that any author who can make you feel such intense love for their main character (in Emily's case, it is herself) deserves all of the success in the world, as books that make you feel something are hard to come by, it seems.

I recommend this book to anyone in the midst of self-discovery. It's not exceptionally encouraging, but it is relatable in its mishaps -- especially in the love department. I wouldn't say that this is much of a summer or beach read; it's more of a taking-a-sick-day read, as I, in particular, enjoyed reading this book on the couch with a blanket covering my legs.
2 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

Clarissa
4.0 out of 5 stars Full of hurt but utterly compelling
Reviewed in Canada on August 7, 2010
Emily Gould writes about her first years in New York. It hurts your heart to read it. Are all young women so vulnerable, so open to pain, so able to stab at others too? Yes. I was a young woman in a big city once and it all rings true.
It is wonderfully written and has phrases that linger in the mind as you ... grow old?
Lola
4.0 out of 5 stars A read for a heart.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 21, 2011
Emily Gould is another young, somewhat emotionally disturbed woman seeing therapist, asking all the right questions, searching for herself in New York City early in the XXI century. After reading Sloane Croasley and Emma Forrest I found myself drawn to these young talented women speaking their mind openly, discussing all sorts of things from relationships and break-ups to having a pet animal and faking having a pet animal, from career and possible career to, ultimately, a search of self in an adult world. "And the heart says whatever..." is written about all of the above things, and more. I loved Emily's book and after reading the last essay I was sad to notice that she has no other books published. Yes, she has blogs and frequently publishes in all the right adult papers and magazines, but I would certainly love to see more of her soul writing, that truly comes from her unspoilt and unselfish heart, no matter how bitchy she could appear in her blog articles.

"And the heart says whatever" is a lovely collection of short essays, after finishing each one of them you want to read some more. The book leaves you feeling positive and hopeful, and I seriously wish that after I'd left this review I could search amazon.co.uk some more and find another wonderful book by Emily Gould. Hopefully, someday.

Great read, with a possible annoyance of constant present of weed in all her stories. But maybe it's just me.
3 people found this helpful
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as1892798
1.0 out of 5 stars Somewhat vapid and self indulgent
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 30, 2013
I'd read such good reviews of this book and since I like confessional, personal type essays I decided to give this a go. Sadly it just felt like someone's rambling anecdotes without any real emotion or feeling behind them at all.