

More just, I had stories from life that were funny and embarrassing and sometimes hard to write and talk about and I figure that if I could maybe share them, they would be relatable and help some people." "I don’t really think of it as I wrote my memoirs, plural. The book - described as "part-memoir, part-VERY long personality test" and structured playfully like those "Choose Your Own Adventure" novels - offers a refreshingly honest take on millennial life and addresses common anxieties that society often leaves in the dark. "It’s less like I wrote my memoirs at 25 - which makes me want to stab myself - and more like, these are just some essays of things that happened in my life from 21 to 23."

Now, she has packaged that humor and wisdom (and even the origin stories of the aforementioned parody efforts) into a new memoir, "Choose Your Own Disaster." If you think mid-twenties is too young for a memoir, Schwartz would likely agree with you. Schwartz’s content sits at the intersection of comedians, entertainers and cross-generational fans of her pop culture criticism. well, they've escaped." /gsUqLcACzrĬavalier or not, her feed serves as a showcase for the 25-year-old "Entertainment Weekly" columnist.

Pangolins are cute because they always look like they're about to hesitantly present some bad news to their sovereign lord.
