š Up to 70% Off Selected ItemsShop Sale
Actually, Nevermind
āOne of the most acclaimed, in-demand superstars of comedyā (Jason Zinoman, The New York Times) Taylor Tomlinson explores all the things sheās changed her mind about, from the serious to the absurd, in her hilarious, heartfelt, and brilliant debut.
As she approaches thirty-fourāthe same age her mother, Angela, was at her deathāTomlinson grapples with fear and ambition, identity and doubt, and all the ways her mind has changed since the day her mom died.
In these sharply observed, uproariously funny, and moving original essays, Tomlinson leads readers through a tour of her brain and her shifting opinions about everything from love and relationships, mental health and therapy, religion and sex, food and body image, being the eldest daughter and the only woman in late-night TV, to ghosts, morning people, and more.
With the same unflinching honesty that fuels her beloved stand-up specials, she captures the dizzying contradictions of adulthood in the modern world: wanting independence while craving reassurance, chasing self-improvement while resisting change, and finally learning that certainty can be overrated. āTrue wisdom,ā writes Tomlinson, āis accepting how little you know, and real maturity is becoming as flexible as possible. (Emotionally, not physically. Real maturity also means needing to stretch way more).ā
A āfearlessā (NPR) comedian who āmakes even the heaviest subjects seem spikily funnyā (Jason Zinoman, The New York Times), Tomlinson now brings her natural storytelling gifts and incisive wit to the page in Actually, Nevermind.
As she approaches thirty-fourāthe same age her mother, Angela, was at her deathāTomlinson grapples with fear and ambition, identity and doubt, and all the ways her mind has changed since the day her mom died.
In these sharply observed, uproariously funny, and moving original essays, Tomlinson leads readers through a tour of her brain and her shifting opinions about everything from love and relationships, mental health and therapy, religion and sex, food and body image, being the eldest daughter and the only woman in late-night TV, to ghosts, morning people, and more.
With the same unflinching honesty that fuels her beloved stand-up specials, she captures the dizzying contradictions of adulthood in the modern world: wanting independence while craving reassurance, chasing self-improvement while resisting change, and finally learning that certainty can be overrated. āTrue wisdom,ā writes Tomlinson, āis accepting how little you know, and real maturity is becoming as flexible as possible. (Emotionally, not physically. Real maturity also means needing to stretch way more).ā
A āfearlessā (NPR) comedian who āmakes even the heaviest subjects seem spikily funnyā (Jason Zinoman, The New York Times), Tomlinson now brings her natural storytelling gifts and incisive wit to the page in Actually, Nevermind.
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Actually, Nevermind
Actually, Nevermind
āOne of the most acclaimed, in-demand superstars of comedyā (Jason Zinoman, The New York Times) Taylor Tomlinson explores all the things sheās changed her mind about, from the serious to the absurd, in her hilarious, heartfelt, and brilliant debut.
As she approaches thirty-fourāthe same age her mother, Angela, was at her deathāTomlinson grapples with fear and ambition, identity and doubt, and all the ways her mind has changed since the day her mom died.
In these sharply observed, uproariously funny, and moving original essays, Tomlinson leads readers through a tour of her brain and her shifting opinions about everything from love and relationships, mental health and therapy, religion and sex, food and body image, being the eldest daughter and the only woman in late-night TV, to ghosts, morning people, and more.
With the same unflinching honesty that fuels her beloved stand-up specials, she captures the dizzying contradictions of adulthood in the modern world: wanting independence while craving reassurance, chasing self-improvement while resisting change, and finally learning that certainty can be overrated. āTrue wisdom,ā writes Tomlinson, āis accepting how little you know, and real maturity is becoming as flexible as possible. (Emotionally, not physically. Real maturity also means needing to stretch way more).ā
A āfearlessā (NPR) comedian who āmakes even the heaviest subjects seem spikily funnyā (Jason Zinoman, The New York Times), Tomlinson now brings her natural storytelling gifts and incisive wit to the page in Actually, Nevermind.
As she approaches thirty-fourāthe same age her mother, Angela, was at her deathāTomlinson grapples with fear and ambition, identity and doubt, and all the ways her mind has changed since the day her mom died.
In these sharply observed, uproariously funny, and moving original essays, Tomlinson leads readers through a tour of her brain and her shifting opinions about everything from love and relationships, mental health and therapy, religion and sex, food and body image, being the eldest daughter and the only woman in late-night TV, to ghosts, morning people, and more.
With the same unflinching honesty that fuels her beloved stand-up specials, she captures the dizzying contradictions of adulthood in the modern world: wanting independence while craving reassurance, chasing self-improvement while resisting change, and finally learning that certainty can be overrated. āTrue wisdom,ā writes Tomlinson, āis accepting how little you know, and real maturity is becoming as flexible as possible. (Emotionally, not physically. Real maturity also means needing to stretch way more).ā
A āfearlessā (NPR) comedian who āmakes even the heaviest subjects seem spikily funnyā (Jason Zinoman, The New York Times), Tomlinson now brings her natural storytelling gifts and incisive wit to the page in Actually, Nevermind.
Select Format
From $27.99
Actually, Nevermindā
$27.99
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
āOne of the most acclaimed, in-demand superstars of comedyā (Jason Zinoman, The New York Times) Taylor Tomlinson explores all the things sheās changed her mind about, from the serious to the absurd, in her hilarious, heartfelt, and brilliant debut.
As she approaches thirty-fourāthe same age her mother, Angela, was at her deathāTomlinson grapples with fear and ambition, identity and doubt, and all the ways her mind has changed since the day her mom died.
In these sharply observed, uproariously funny, and moving original essays, Tomlinson leads readers through a tour of her brain and her shifting opinions about everything from love and relationships, mental health and therapy, religion and sex, food and body image, being the eldest daughter and the only woman in late-night TV, to ghosts, morning people, and more.
With the same unflinching honesty that fuels her beloved stand-up specials, she captures the dizzying contradictions of adulthood in the modern world: wanting independence while craving reassurance, chasing self-improvement while resisting change, and finally learning that certainty can be overrated. āTrue wisdom,ā writes Tomlinson, āis accepting how little you know, and real maturity is becoming as flexible as possible. (Emotionally, not physically. Real maturity also means needing to stretch way more).ā
A āfearlessā (NPR) comedian who āmakes even the heaviest subjects seem spikily funnyā (Jason Zinoman, The New York Times), Tomlinson now brings her natural storytelling gifts and incisive wit to the page in Actually, Nevermind.
As she approaches thirty-fourāthe same age her mother, Angela, was at her deathāTomlinson grapples with fear and ambition, identity and doubt, and all the ways her mind has changed since the day her mom died.
In these sharply observed, uproariously funny, and moving original essays, Tomlinson leads readers through a tour of her brain and her shifting opinions about everything from love and relationships, mental health and therapy, religion and sex, food and body image, being the eldest daughter and the only woman in late-night TV, to ghosts, morning people, and more.
With the same unflinching honesty that fuels her beloved stand-up specials, she captures the dizzying contradictions of adulthood in the modern world: wanting independence while craving reassurance, chasing self-improvement while resisting change, and finally learning that certainty can be overrated. āTrue wisdom,ā writes Tomlinson, āis accepting how little you know, and real maturity is becoming as flexible as possible. (Emotionally, not physically. Real maturity also means needing to stretch way more).ā
A āfearlessā (NPR) comedian who āmakes even the heaviest subjects seem spikily funnyā (Jason Zinoman, The New York Times), Tomlinson now brings her natural storytelling gifts and incisive wit to the page in Actually, Nevermind.












