But Enough about Me: A Jersey Girl's Unlikely Adventures among the Absurdly Famous

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Overview

The second I stepped through the doors of Rolling Stone as a real employee, I wanted to shake off my old personality like the rigid husk of a cicada. But how could I cultivate a new, hip persona when I lived with my parents in a New Jersey suburb and wore black leggings as pants?

New Jersey in the 1980s had everything Jancee Dunn wanted: trips down the shore, Bruce Springsteen, a tantalizing array of malls, and, especially, her family. Barreling down the Turnpike in her parents' Buick LeSabre, her perm brushing the ceiling of the car, she felt ragingly alive. But one night she met a girl who worked at Rolling Stone magazine in New York City. To Jancee, ...

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Overview

The second I stepped through the doors of Rolling Stone as a real employee, I wanted to shake off my old personality like the rigid husk of a cicada. But how could I cultivate a new, hip persona when I lived with my parents in a New Jersey suburb and wore black leggings as pants?

New Jersey in the 1980s had everything Jancee Dunn wanted: trips down the shore, Bruce Springsteen, a tantalizing array of malls, and, especially, her family. Barreling down the Turnpike in her parents' Buick LeSabre, her perm brushing the ceiling of the car, she felt ragingly alive. But one night she met a girl who worked at Rolling Stone magazine in New York City. To Jancee, who visited the city exactly once a year with her parents and two sisters, New York might as well have been in Canada. But she loved music, so with bleak expectations she passed along her résumé, dashing her father's hopes that she would carry on the family legacy of service to J. C. Penney (a man so revered that a bust of his head was proudly displayed in the den) .

Soon Jancee found herself backstage and behind the scenes, interviewing a countless (and nerve-racking) parade of some of the most famous people in the world, among them Madonna, Cameron Diaz, and Beyoncé. She trekked to the Canadian Rockies to hike with Brad Pitt, was chased by paparazzi who mistook her for Ben Affleck's new girlfriend, snacked on Velveeta with Dolly Parton, and danced drunkenly onstage with the Beastie Boys. She even became a TV star as a pioneering VJ on MTV2.

As her life spun faster, she plunged into the booze-soaked rock-and-roll life, trading her good-girl suburban past for latenights and hipster guys. But then a chance meeting turned Jancee's life in an unexpected direction and helped her to finally learn to appreciate where she came from, who she was, and what she wanted to be.

Riotously funny and tremendously touching, But Enough About Me is the story of an outsider who couldn't quite bring herself to become an insider and introduces readers to a hysterical, lovable real-life heroine.

Editorial Reviews

The New Yorker
Dunn grew up culturally bereft in the nineteen-eighties, but parlayed a modest knowledge of pop music into a job at Rolling Stone. After establishing her bona fides as a square, she devotes her memoir to an inside look at being a celebrity journalist and the eventual toll this takes on her soul. The chapters alternate between entertaining set pieces—peeking into Madonna’s bathroom, being given Velveeta cheese by Dolly Parton (Dunn still has it in her freezer), turning down a rocker’s offer of heroin—and considerations of what it means to be an aging rock chick. Dunn tells her story in the brisk prose of a magazine profile, and, in keeping with her memoir’s title, she goes easy on personal matters, apparently preferring to show the life of a celebrity interviewer refracted through the lives she writes about.
Publishers Weekly
Known for her celebrity profiles, journalist Dunn blends interviewing tips, dirt-digging secrets and memoir-type snippets in a mix that's tough to define, but a delight to read. As a frequent writer for Rolling Stone and contributor to Vanity Fair, GQ and Vogue, Dunn can reach an array of stars and has the anecdotes to prove it. She details ducking the paparazzi with Mel Gibson, eating in Dolly Parton's kitchen and posing for three minutes as Ben Affleck's girlfriend to prove a point about how quickly gossip spreads. Refreshingly, she maintains an "Aw, shucks" quality that has become her work's hallmark. By providing a zesty glimpse at her New Jersey childhood and young adulthood, Dunn offers a grounded counterpoint to the breezy tales of pop idol handling. Even after rising in the ranks at Rolling Stone, Dunn is mildly astounded that a Jersey girl who still slips phrases like "Yeah, right!" into her conversation should be shaking in her ritzy hotel room after being berated by Flashdance icon Jennifer Beals for asking about her personal life. Amusing, clever and affable, Dunn shares a satisfying memoir-turned-celebrity dish. (June) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
Library Journal
This memoir of a Jersey girl-turned-hip Manhattan writer sparkles with wry humor, touching honesty, and celebrity insight. Dunn, a longtime writer for Rolling Stone, fondly recounts her suburban youth while chronicling her rise to fame as an interviewer, writer, and media correspondent. Her genial family and beloved Jersey landscape provide a colorful framework for her coming of age. Inevitably, conflict arises when Dunn's career takes off, and chapters on this part of her working life are presented tongue-in-cheek as tips on the art of interviewing celebrities (e.g., mastering opening patter and dealing with paparazzi). This hilariously entertaining approach not only provides an incisive glimpse into the eclectic nature of Dunn's subjects-who range from Madonna to Barry White-but also smoothly complements the material on her personal life. Along the way, Dunn comes to realizations about family, career, fame, and relationships, but unlike so many other memoirs, hers is not heavyhanded with personal observations; her story speaks for itself-and speaks well. A thoroughly enjoyable book for circulating libraries and entertainment collections. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 2/15/06.]-Carol J. Binkowski, Bloomfield, NJ Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
Mall-rat moves to the city, becomes a Rock Chick, then rediscovers her inner nerd. In high school, the author sported "a perm that was extreme even by mideighties New Jersey standards, rendering my hair as dense and impenetrable as a boxwood hedge." She dreamed of a glamorous life, but as she entered adulthood, it seemed the world had anything but glamour in store for her. After dropping out of the University of Delaware, Dunn moved in with her parents and went to work as a fact-checker for an ad agency. This was the kind of job to which a gal wore a plaid suit with giant shoulder pads, a string tie and a hairspray helmet. Bored stiff, Dunn leapt at a chance to interview for an editorial-assistant post at Rolling Stone. Charming the higher-ups with her decided lack of Ivy League polish, she got the gig and soon had her own byline. With the new job came a fantasy urban life: countless men, countless clubs, not to mention Ray Charles serenading her in an elevator and Christian Aguilera sending her a bouquet of flowers. Eventually, though, Dunn realized that this ultra-cool existence was not for her. She began hanging out with her mom and spending most nights in her apartment watching documentaries. Despite the unwieldy subtitle and the distracting how-to-interview-a-celebrity interludes, this debut memoir isn't really about working at Rolling Stone. It's about becoming acquainted with, and accepting, your true self. Dunn is a master of character development, capturing the essence of a person in just a few, well-chosen details, and she deftly deploys dialogue. Indeed, her prose transforms the predictable plotline of the last 100 pages-as her sisters and friends churn out babies, Dunn datesmany losers, and her biological clock ticks ever louder-into something magical. Funny, frothy and fabulous.

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780641894343
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Publication date: 5/30/2006
  • Edition number: 1
  • Pages: 274
  • Product dimensions: 6.34 (w) x 9.10 (h) x 1.05 (d)

Meet the Author

Jancee Dunn
Jancee Dunn

Jancee Dunn grew up in a hopelessly retro suburban family that worshiped Gordon Lightfoot and ate only beige, fiber-free food. Outfitted in classic Garanimals purchased at the local JC Penney that her father proudly managed, she wondered why anyone would ever want to leave her home and her heaven -- Central New Jersey.

But despite her early addiction to Aqua-Net, too much eye makeup, and Bad Company, Jancee Dunn was lured to the bright lights of Manhattan when a chance encounter led to a job at Rolling Stone magazine. Soon she found herself in the midst of incredibly surprising (and often terrifying) moments--from being mistaken for Ben Affleck's girlfriend, to dancing drunkenly onstage with the Beastie Boys and eating Velveeta in Dolly Parton's kitchen.

But Jancee soon learned that celebrities don't have the perfect lives -- and the deeper she fell down the rabbit hole of fame the further she got from the people and places she loved the most. But Enough About Me is hysterically funny, tremendously touching, and surprisingly romantic, and brings readers deep inside the culture of celebrity while introducing them to a hilarious and lovable real-life heroine.

Jancee Dunn has been a writer for Rolling Stone since 1989 and was a correspondent for Good Morning America and an MTV VJ. She writes for many different publications, among them GQ, Vanity Fair, Harper's Bazaar, The Oprah Magazine, Vogue, and the New York Times. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.

Read an Excerpt

But Enough About Me

A Jersey Girl's Unlikely Adventures Among the Absurdly Famous
By Jancee Dunn

HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.

Copyright © 2006 Jancee Dunn
All right reserved.

ISBN: 0060843640

Chapter One

I am fifteen. I am going to my first concert unaccompanied by my parents. This is thrilling for a number of reasons. One, because I was invited by Cindy Patzau, the most glamorous girl in my sophomore class, still glinting with stardust after a recent performance during a school assembly in which she did a dramatic interpretive dance to Cyndi Lauper's "Time After Time." She wore a clingy black bodysuit in front of the whole school. She was my hero.

"You want me to go with you?" I squeaked when she called. I sat with the popular kids in our high school cafeteria, but I certainly wasn't A-list. When I got my braces off that year, no one noticed for a week, whereas when Liz Kincaid had hers removed, there was much squealing and jubilation in the halls. During senior year I was voted Class Clown when I desperately wanted Best Legs (won by a girl with the movie-star moniker of Jill Shores). As the clown, I was the peripheral Don Rickles figure to the bronzed, carefree Dean Martins and Frank Sinatras, bristling with sour flop sweat, one bad joke away from being banished from the Sands. At the time of Cindy's call, I was on unsteady social ground due to a recent gaffe at a party. I wasleaning against a wall, waiting in the bathroom line, when a senior named Mark, a hip soccer player who wore Adidas Sambas and liked the Clash, materialized behind me. He smirked. "Holding up the wall?" he asked.

Tell me, what is the sharp, snappy rejoinder to "Holding up the wall?" I gawped at him as everyone in the line nudged each other, waiting for my trademark lightning comeback. Holding up the wall. Holding up the wall. Seasons passed. The leaves on the trees outside withered, dropped, bloomed, and withered again. Holding. Wall. Mark abruptly turned away from me and started chatting up another girl. Good-bye, Rat Pack, hello, dinner theater in Jupiter, Florida.

"This show," I said to Cindy. My words came out in a high-pitched, phlegmy squawk: Zhis gghow. I hurriedly cleared my throat. "Is it just you and me?" Surely there would be others.

"Yes," Cindy said calmly. "I know you have good taste in music, so the ticket won't be wasted." While I was processing this, I heard the click of a phone being picked up in my parents' bedroom. It was my younger sister Dinah. I could tell by her breathing. If I didn't play this phone call right, it could be my Waterloo, and I was frantic that Dinah shouldn't hear any bumbling. I needed to scare her. I inched toward the hallway in order to get a view of the bedrooms upstairs. Because there were three girls in our family, the phone cord in our kitchen had been stretched until it was ten yards long in our efforts to have a little privacy. Recently, my youngest sister, Heather, had managed to reach the hall closet, and conducted her preteen business with the door shut and key words muffled by the coats. I stretched the cord, gently but firmly, and crept over to where I could just glimpse Dinah in my parents' room. I waved furiously and her head jerked up. Goddamn you, I mouthed, affecting a tough squint. She froze like a snowshoe hare -- out of fear, or stubbornness, I couldn't tell -- but she didn't hang up.

While I fought rising hysteria, Cindy detonated this: The concert was to take place at a college. We would have to cross the New Jersey state line to Haverford College in Pennsylvania. With her older sister! And we'd spend the night! In a dorm room!

"Cool," I said, elaborately casual. "I'm in." I could hear Dinah's sharp intake of breath. She knew as well as I that it would take a typhoon of tears to persuade my strict father to let me go. Hear me out, old man, I thought grimly (he was thirty-nine at the time). I am going. Oh yes. I am going.

A week later, after frenzied negotiations with my parents that rivaled the SALT talks in length and intensity, I was allowed to accompany Cindy to Haverford. The night before I left, after a bout of gastrointestinal distress at the thought of hanging around a VIP like Cindy for a sustained length of time (this would become a lifelong pattern), I retired to my room to pack.

Soon enough, there was a timid knock on the door. Dinah and Heather stood silently, knowing that they must be invited in. "Hey, can we watch you pack?" asked Dinah. At fifteen, I still held powerful sway over my younger sisters, and I carefully polished my mystique. Usually when they were allowed to enter the sanctum, it was so that I could extort their cash. My "garage sales" were a frequent scheme. "Garage sale in my room, five o'clock," I would announce briskly as they raced to their rooms to scrounge for money or begged the folks for a forward on their allowance. Meanwhile, I rummaged through my drawers for tchotchkes to unload: a frayed collection of Wacky Pacs, a half-empty bottle of Enjoli, a trio of black rubber Madonna bracelets. As they waited by the door, twitching with eagerness, I would build momentum by popping my head out every once in a while with updates. "Five more minutes," I'd bark. "Lotta good stuff in here, lotta good stuff. I really shouldn't be selling some of this." Finally I would fling open the door and they would push over each other, running.

During one of these bazaars, my mother watched from the doorway, arms folded, lips pursed. "You should be ashamed of yourself," she said.

"Why?" I asked coolly, shutting the door on her. "For bringing color and excitement into my sisters' lives?"

I also gave various lessons. Ballet instruction cost fifty cents, seventy-five cents for the deluxe. For that particular con, I . . .

Continues...


Excerpted from But Enough About Me by Jancee Dunn Copyright © 2006 by Jancee Dunn. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Reading Group Guide

Introduction

ABOUT: With her impenetrable Rick James perm, her plaid interview suit, and her state school education, there was no way Jancee Dunn was going to land a job at one of the hippest magazines around. With a little luck and a lot of hard work, Jancee not only got her dream job at Rolling Stone, but quickly became one of their top reporters, interviewing such mega-stars as Brad Pitt, Madonna, Barry White, and Ben Affleck. But when this suburban New Jersey girl from a conservative middle-class family gets caught up in the rock-and-roll lifestyle, she turns in her good-girl past for late nights and hipster guys. Booze-soaked nights turn into years, and Jancee wakes up one day to discover she's the oldest Rock Chick at the magazine. A chance meeting helps Jancee appreciate where she came from, who she was, and what she wanted to be.

Questions for Discussion

QUESTION: 1 How did Jancee's feeling of being an outsider early on in her life actually help her interviewing skills?

2. Do you think Jancee's job influenced her rock-and-roll lifestyle, or do you think the men she met had more influence over her choices?

3. Jancee's family plays a big role in her life. One day Jancee finally "interviews" her mother and discovers there's so much about her own family she doesn't even know. How does this event begin to turn Jancee's life around?

4. Barry White's advice to Jancee was "Love as hard as you can, and as strong as you can, but never, ever fall in love." Why was this an important piece of advice for Jancee to heed?

5. "The more it was apparent that my days as a Rock Chick were waning, the harder I clung to the crumbling identity I had built up so carefully" (page 199, HC). Did Jancee still see herself as an outsider playing a role? Why do you think she never fully became that Rock Chick person?

6. The Dunn family could not be more hopelessly conservative and retro while Jancee's life spirals in the complete opposite direction. Why does Jancee call her father when life with the famous begins to get too surreal?

7. Near the end of the book, Jancee visits Rolling Stone and realizes that she had become one of the magazine's older people that the younger staffers tolerated. Did you agree that it was time for her to find another line of work? Is rock and roll a younger person's game?

8. Jancee has interviewed Patti Scialfa, but never one of her childhood idols, Bruce Springsteen. Many people never want to meet their idols in person in case they might be disappointed. Do you agree with this line of thinking?

9. Do you think that people pay too much attention to celebrities? What is the danger of celebrity worship? What need does this seem to fulfill in our own lives? With the rise of internet celebrity coverage, we are turned into a collective high school, as we comment on stars and condemn or celebrate their behavior. Do you think that candid photographs are an invasion of their privacy, or is everything fair game when you're a public figure?

10. Jancee has rules for engaging celebrities in conversation, such as 'never begin with 'I' . . . Leading off with something about yourself is deadly.' Are there rules in the book that could apply to everyday conversations with others?

Customer Reviews

Average Rating 4
( 9 )

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Sort by: Showing all of 9 Customer Reviews
  • Anonymous

    Posted May 31, 2009

    HORRIBLE!

    This book is so boring. I tried reading it for school and it was really boring. i hated this book.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted December 3, 2008

    Great Read!

    I loved this book. Once I picked it up, I could not put it down. Jancee has a wonderful and relateable writing style. She makes you feel like you are sitting down to coffee with an old friend. I took this book with me on vacation and ended up spending extra time at the pool so I could read one more chapter. This book is a must have for every thirty something female.

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted July 20, 2006

    Addictive

    I picked this book up after reading a review on it in People mag. Normally, I don't venture into the realm of biographies, but I was really impressed with this one! It's a lightning fast read and absolutely hilarious. Her stories and experiences are easy to relate to and offer a glimpse into the life of a rock 'n' roll journalist...something highly coveted and scary at the same time! Loved it! Grab this one!

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted July 8, 2006

    a fun read!

    A fun, light read for summertime (or any time). I grew up in the same town as Ms. Dunn and found her stories extremely amusing and her depictions of life in suburban NJ very real. Her self-abasing humor is laugh-out-loud funny, totally my style. Thanks, Jancee!

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted June 22, 2006

    Fun summer read...

    During the summer, I tend to learn toward fluffier books that are pure, unabashed guilty pleasures. This book fits the bill. Its intelligently written, but funny. I actually giggled out loud at a few parts. It was an easy and fun read, perfect for by the pool or beach, I think every 20-30 something woman can relate to Jancee.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted June 6, 2006

    funny but poignant

    I'm not a real reader and certainly never write reviews, but I bought this book at my friend's insistence. I couldn't put it down and was reading all week-end. It's funny, it's sad, it's relevant and above all, it's honest. Ms. Dunn is a real talent!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 25, 2006

    Couldn't put it down...funny

    Grabbed this book off the advance reading copy shelf at the bookstore I work at, and I'm so glad I did. Anyone interested in pop culture will enjoy this book. I love how Jancee intertwined her life growing up with her life as a celebrity reporter for Rolling Stone, MTV2, etc. I was laughing out loud at parts because it reminded me of growing up with my brother and sister, especially her attempts to get rid of her junk by selling it off to her younger sisters, and her and her sister dancing around with their Sweatworks sweatsuits. I also enjoyed reading about her visits to celebrity homes and her interaction with the Olsen twins. Great reading from a normal girl, who strived to be a little bit rock n' roll.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted June 25, 2006

    Great Summer Read

    Took it to the beach and read it all afternoon. The title depicts the book, she is so quick and funny and very much what I imagine a 'Jersey girl' to be. Some family stories we can all relate to and enough juice about the rich and famous to keep it moving but it never becomes sleezy or not believable.

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted November 20, 2008

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