Sometimes I Trip On How Happy We Coul..., Nichole Perkins
Sometimes I Trip On How Happy We Coul..., Nichole Perkins
1 Rating(s)
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Sometimes I Trip On How Happy We Could Be

Author: Nichole Perkins

Narrator: Nichole Perkins

Unabridged: 7 hr 2 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 08/17/2021


Synopsis

In this "saucy and smart" memoir, a journalist uses pop culture as a lens to navigate her identity as a Black woman (Oprah Daily).

Nichole Perkins takes readers on a rollicking trip through the last twenty years of music, media and the internet, exploring her experience with mental illness, her attachment to the TV show Frasier, her role as a mistress, Prince, and what it means to figure out desire and sexuality in a world where women are still expected to prioritize marriage.

Combining her sharp wit, stellar pop culture sensibility, and trademark spirited storytelling, Nichole boldly tackles the damage done to women–especially Black women–by society’s failure to confront the myths and misogyny at its heart. Nichole illuminates how to take the best pop culture has to offer and discard the harmful bits, offering a mirror into our own lives.

A Roxane Gay Audacious Bookclub November Pick

Named "Most Anticipated Books of 2021" by Buzzfeed and Lithub

Reviews

Goodreads review by Roxane on May 01, 2021

In these sharp, uncompromising essays, Nichole Perkins probes the intersections between her blackness, hailing from the South, her womanhood, and her sexuality. There is an appealing self-awareness in these essay— a willingness to examine her flaws as much as her strengths. The book gets stronger an......more

Goodreads review by Ms. Woc Reader on August 17, 2021

Nichole Perkins has lived a life! She doesn't hold back from the first essay Fast she explores her relationship and somewhat obsession with sex in a way I've never heard anyone be so blatantly honest before. I had to push some of my own judgement and bias aside just to read some of these essays. And......more

Goodreads review by chantel on October 28, 2021

Way too relatable. I don't know what that says about me. Yo, we even love Fraiser to the same level, it's just too much! I enjoyed the hell out of this. It really was like talking with my friends in my twenties about the insanity we were up to. It was great. I smiled and grinned and giggled my way t......more

Goodreads review by Raluca on September 13, 2021

I think the title misled me into thinking this collection of essays would focus on arts / pop culture much more than it did. The several pieces on Perkins' sexual life and my slight shudder at reading them made me realize I'm one hell of a prude. And while I didn't love this particular collection, I......more

Goodreads review by Rachel on May 23, 2022

I wanted to like this so bad 😭 I was so excited to read it. The most important thing I feel like I need to point out is that this collection of essays is the author’s homage to her vagina. I’m kind of tempted to reread it so I can keep a count of how often she mentions it being “gushy” or “tight” or......more


Quotes

"In these sharp, uncompromising essays, Nichole Perkins probes the intersections between her blackness, hailing from the South, her womanhood, and her sexuality. There is an appealing self-awareness in these essay— a willingness to examine her flaws as much as her strengths. The book gets stronger and stronger and the final few essays are clarion calls to naming things as they are, claiming the power you desire, and embracing yourself unapologetically."—Roxane Gay, New York Times bestselling author of Bad Feminist

"Nichole’s work is necessary, urgent, and so beautiful. At turns surprising and familiar, tender and brutal, the entire collection is a love letter to the black girls we were, to the black women we are, and to the brave, new beings we are growing up to be."—Jesmyn Ward, National Book Award-winning author of Sing, Unburied, Sing

“It is not easy to be open with reflections on sexuality, intimacy, pleasure, religion, race, and class, but Nichole does so with such intellect, thoughtfulness, and levity. Sometimes I Trip On How Happy We Could Be is not only another welcomed contribution because of the sharp, funny, and focused voice Nichole Perkins brings to those issues and others, but that she brings a working class southern Black perspective that more of America needs to hear from.” —Michael Arceneaux, New York Times bestselling author of I Can’t Date Jesus: Love, Sex, Family, Race, and Other Reasons I’ve Put My Faith in Beyoncé and I Don’t Want To Die

"For me, the joy in reading SOMETIMES I TRIP ON HOW HAPPY WE COULD BE is in witnessing how — essay by essay, revelation by hard-won revelation — Nichole comes into awareness of her own power like a storm gaining strength just off the coast. The girl who sneaks romance novels into Sunday church services becomes the woman asking tough, keen questions about what she wants and what we all want. I hear the dark liquor of her laughter rippling behind her sentences. I hear the rich timbre of a writer who knows that vital power lives in pleasures."—Saeed Jones, award-winning author of How We Fight for Our Lives

"These essays are at once poignant, timely, and a lot of fun to read. In Sometimes I Trip On How Happy We Could Be, Nichole Perkins manages to write about Prince as brilliantly as she does her first hotmail account, and makes it look easy. This book is meant to be read in the bathtub, with good wine, and even better company on the way."
 —Ashley C. Ford, author of Somebody's Daughter

"Sometimes I Trip On How Happy We Could Be is easily one of the best books I’ve read in the last two years. Nichole Perkins is a force, and a must watch. The opening essay is as striking as the last. I laughed, I cried, and I felt seen. Like the best books are, this is a wonderful journey. I already can’t wait to read it again."
 —Keah Brown, author of The Pretty One

"[A] candid, affecting, and joyful read."—Buzzfeed