New York Times reviews Nora Ephron’s last book

November 26, 2010
We remember you, Nora.
Book design by Soonyoung Kwon

“She’s familiar but funny, boldly outspoken yet simultaneously reassuring,” wrote Alex Kuczynski in a review of Nora Ephron’s final book “I Remember Nothing,” a sequel to her 2006 work “I Feel Bad About My Neck.”

Her work was sprinkled through with everyday objects, activities, and catchphrases (“I’ll have what she’s having”), while managing to capture the complexities of relationships, our daily lives, and the sometimes comical, sometimes tragic ways we see our world.  In the mundane details of her life, she found a profound timelessness and universality, noting that when she died, she would miss “taking a bath.  Coming over the bridge to Manhattan.  Pie.”

Kuczynski noted, “I Remember Nothing does at times give us more depth and gravity and an actual, almost gravely serious reflection on divorce, duplicity, disease.”  But no matter the depths of despair her characters faced, there was always a sense of uplift if not redemption in their endings.  Harry did indeed meet Sally.  Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan Got Mail.  Julie and Julia were two sides of the same coin.

As Kuczynski wrote, “Ephron is the poster girl for the religion of When Life Gives You Lemons, Make Lemonade.”

Sources:  “The Oft-Examined Life,” Alex Kuczynski, New York Times.

 

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Jewish Women's Archive. "New York Times reviews Nora Ephron’s last book." (Viewed on November 21, 2024) <https://jwa.org/thisweek/nov/26/2010/nora-ephron>.