Reviews

എൻ്റെ കഥ [Ente Katha] by Marilyn Monroe

wildflowerfieldsforever's review against another edition

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4.0

I bumped this an extra star because it’s an unfinished work (as far as the words that Marilyn Monroe contributed) and for the gorgeous photography. I appreciated reading about Marilyn’s life, in her own words. There is so much aching and longing in her thoughts and words. In a lot of ways, her life is heartbreaking, her childhood especially.

I feel that in a lot of ways, Marilyn was fairly naive. Yet, I believe she was also quite a bit more intelligent for which she was given credit. I wish she had had a longer life.

zjunjunia's review against another edition

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4.0

I haven't read a book in a single sitting for quite a while but this was it. I've always been fascinated by the Hollywood scene especially after watching the series on Netflix (I'd recommend that if you haven't!). I have so much more admiration for the person she was - too often we categorise actors because we never bother to hear their story.

v_o's review against another edition

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informative lighthearted reflective fast-paced

3.75

lpm100's review against another edition

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4.0

Book Review
4 stars
Pithy, quotable, and incomplete autobiography of a convert to Judaism.
*******

This book felt like it was castrated.

It started from the beginning and went all the way through to the beginning of the second marriage.

There was still another marriage to go, as well as a conversion to Judaism (which was actually the thing in which I was interested and which sold me on the book).

"My Story" was published in 1974, 12 years after Marilyn Monroe died. (There have been lots of books written about the subject, but I believe that this is her only autobiography.)

And the edition that I'm reading was published 33 years after that-- with the addition of many many pictures of the photogenic Monroe.

*******
Of the book:

The chapters are extremely short. (35 chapters over 185 pages of prose works out to just over five pages per chapter.)

Even though the book was very short, Monroe managed to reveal everything by covering only what was necessary.

It took very few words to say a lot (=the opposite of Ayn Rand). The writing almost has an Eric Hofferesque feel, as if it was crafted as a series of aphorisms.

For some reason, the editor was determined to make this into a combination of an autobiography and a modeling portfolio: The entire introduction is taken up with discussions of the photos of Monroe, and even though the actual length of the book is 185 pages.... something like 85 of the pages are pictures and 100 of them are prose.

And even though Monroe was a very nice looking person, I wanted to know a little bit more about the person behind the facade. (And I won't be reading any of these other biographies because the time-cost exceeds the value of the information.)

Part of the problem with books that are written by co-authors is that one never knows how much of the voice is that of the subject versus that of the co-author.

That said:

°°Marilyn Monroe, as exposited here, is extremely pithy, quotable and plain-spoken.

(p.29): "....husbands are chiefly good as lovers when they are betraying their wives."

(p.46): "If there are any books on the subject, I must have skipped them, along with a few million other books I haven't read."

(p.53): "You're judged by how you look, not by what you are. Hollywood's a place where they'll pay you $1,000 for a kiss and 50 cents for your soul. I know, because I turned down the first offer often enough and held out for the 50 cents."

(p.73): "It is hard to explain how you can fall in love while you are being bored to death, but I know it's true, because it happened to me several times."

(p. 128): "The most unsatisfactory men are those who pride themselves on their virility and regard sex as if it were some form of athletics and would you win cups. It is a woman's spirit and mood a man has to stimulate in order to make sex interesting."

(p. 129): "I've seen women at parties who had only enough clothes on to keep from being arrested."

°°She was also very perceptive, and she makes us very aware of the vicious competition and general ugliness the people will encounter when trying to make a living in Hollywood. (A dumb blonde, this girl was not.)

°°It seems that Monroe had a very difficult life:

1. Being abandoned by her father (because he was not interested to stay around and raise a child).

2. Being constructively abandoned by her mother, who was institutionalized too much to take care of her.

3. Being raped at 9 years old.

4. Living in nine different foster homes as a child. (Some really cute places in here. One of them where the toilet was only flushed in the morning because it was five gallons of water per flush. Another where everybody in the house used the same bath water and Monroe was the last person to bathe.)

5. There was a lot of severe mental illness on both sides of her family with several close relatives.

And this author was suspiciously intelligent in the way that a lot of mentally ill people are:

1. Distorted perceptions. (For instance, she says that Louis Calhern committed suicide on p. 112. But, it appears that he died of a heart attack.)

2. A penchant for self-destruction. (Ch.25)

3. She knew the end even while she was at the beginning. (p.73): "I was the kind of girl they found dead in a hall bedroom with an empty bottle of sleeping pills in her hand"

4. Unwilling to be happy about anything or allow herself to enjoy anything. All of those years knocking herself out to prove that she was a star, and then finally when stardom came complaining about the quality thereof. (For the life of me, I can't figure out why people have objections to playing a certain type of character. By definition, being an actor is getting paid to pretend that you are somebody you aren't.)

Of her Monroe's career:

1. She was bigger in death than in life;

2. There were MANY lean years before fame and success;

3. Acting and singing classes only came after she actually went to hollywood.

******

I don't guess that is a secret that people who have traumatic childhoods are never able to recover from them--and even when they are surrounded by people who love them or fame and popularity, it is just never enough for them to shake it off. (My father grew up extremely indigent, and the trauma was such that he was never able to get out of drug abuse. And he probably did not take maximum benefit out of having a devoted wife and two children because he couldn't fully perceive them.)

Loneliness is the most persistent theme of this book, even though people with nice looks can have the world as their oyster much of the time. ("Loneliness was tough, the toughest role you ever played. Hollywood created a superstar, and pain was the price you paid.")

And so, this chronicle of something that has happened many many times before is only different in that the person upon whom this misfortune was visited was extremely nice looking and (posthumously) famous.

NO INDEX.

Verdict: Recommended at the price of $5.

Caveat emptor! The book is incomplete.

miss_vonnegut's review against another edition

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emotional funny reflective sad medium-paced

3.75

If you want insight into Marilyn Monroe and how she thought, this is a wonderful book. I didn't know much about her real self before reading this, and it had a lot of great moments. You get to discover how observant and intelligent she was. Note that this was written in the 50s or 60s, so there are a lot of outdated ideas (especially regarding women and their relationships with each other, among other things), which is why I rated it the way I did. I still loved reading it, it's just important to think critically about those things. Another thing to note, this book ends with the line "This is where Marilyn's manuscript ended when she gave it to me," so there's no real ending and it's quite abrupt. It was fine, just unexpected.

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yunjin's review against another edition

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challenging emotional informative reflective sad medium-paced

ivyrequiem's review against another edition

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5.0

Magical! A beautifully tragic insight of the world of Marilyn Monroe told with astonishingly poetic and beautiful language. A true artist! A very very interesting read. <3

mellymellreads's review against another edition

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funny relaxing sad

4.0

jmwise1's review against another edition

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5.0

I loved hearing from Marilyn's point of view on her life and fame and opinions of different topics. She's actually really smart, but street smart. (: She's a shy person, so this book was so fun to get inside her head. I loved that she didn't fit in with the rest of Hollywood with all its fake stars and important people. She was an honest and real woman; a rare gem to find in Hollywood. I also loved that she wasn't a total nympho like most of the world thinks. She was such a lady.

vesinyrkki's review against another edition

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inspiring reflective

3.75