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You Can't Touch My Hair: And Other Things I Still Have to Explain

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A NEW YORK TIMES BEST SELLER • “A must-read...Phoebe Robinson discusses race and feminism in such a funny, real, and specific way, it penetrates your brain and stays with you.”—Ilana Glazer, co-creator and co-star of Broad CityA hilarious and timely essay collection about race, gender, and pop culture from comedy superstar and 2 Dope Queens podcaster Phoebe RobinsonBeing a black woman in America means contending with old prejudices and fresh absurdities every day. Comedian Phoebe Robinson has experienced her fair share over the she's been unceremoniously relegated to the role of “the black friend,” as if she is somehow the authority on all things racial; she's been questioned about her love of U2 and Billy Joel (“isn’t that...white people music?”); she's been called “uppity” for having an opinion in the workplace; she's been followed around stores by security guards; and yes, people do ask her whether they can touch her hair all. the. time. Now, she's ready to take these topics to the page—and she’s going to make you laugh as she’s doing it.Using her trademark wit alongside pop-culture references galore, Robinson explores everything from why Lisa Bonet is “Queen. Bae. Jesus,” to breaking down the terrible nature of casting calls, to giving her less-than-traditional advice to the future female president, and demanding that the NFL clean up its act, all told in the same conversational voice that launched her podcast, 2 Dope Queens, to the top spot on iTunes. As personal as it is political, You Can't Touch My Hair examines our cultural climate and skewers our biases with humor and heart, announcing Robinson as a writer on the rise.One of Glamour's “Top 10 Books of 2016”

318 pages, Kindle Edition

First published October 4, 2016

1280 people are currently reading
41496 people want to read

About the author

Phoebe Robinson

6 books1,135 followers
Phoebe Robinson is a stand-up comedian, writer, and actress whom Vulture.com, Essence, and Esquire have named one of the top comedians to watch. She has appeared on NBC’s Late Night with Seth Meyers and Last Call with Carson Daly; TBS's Conan, Comedy Central’s Broad City, and @midnight with Chris Hardwick; as well recently landing a recurring role on the new Jill Soloway show for Amazon I Love Dick.

Robinson’s writing has been featured in The Village Voice, NY Mag, and on Glamour.com, TheDailyBeast.com, VanityFair.com, Vulture.com, and NYTimes.com. She was also a staff writer on MTV’s hit talking head show, Girl Code, as well as a consultant on season three of Broad City.

Most recently, she created and starred in Refinery29’s web series Woke Bae and, alongside Jessica Williams, formerly of The Daily Show, she is the creator and costar of the hit WNYC podcast 2 Dope Queens as well as the host of the critically-acclaimed WNYC podcast Many White Guys. Robinson is the author of the New York Times best selling book, You Can't Touch My Hair, a collection of essays about race, gender, and pop culture. Robinson lives and performs stand-up in Brooklyn, NY, and is busy planning her upcoming nuptials to Michael Fassbender.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 2,549 reviews
Profile Image for Petra X.
2,455 reviews35.7k followers
February 9, 2017
Is this book an American thing? It might be you have to be American to enjoy it, to get the references, like her particular brand of humour. Feel the catharsism of being berated for being racist although it's not your personal fault, if you are White but don't worry, she likes White people especially dudes. No matter how much you and everyone else might want this time to be Post-Racist, it can't be, Whites are holding it back. The author says that there are BPS, Black People's Secrets which are kept from Whites and tells one that I didn't get. Like having to say someone could act even though he couldn't because White people said he couldn't. Was that supposed to be enlightening or funny? I didn't get either.

I did try. I read the first 50 pages even the forewords which were boring as most forewords are, then I swapped to the audio book, but although I liked the premise of the book - a racial education for the ignorant (Whites) done in a warm and humourous way. As Robinson herself says, she isn't Ta-Nehisi Coates. I wasn't enlightened and I wasn't amused. I found the authors' voices strident and trying too hard. After reading the South African Trevor Noah's 10-star Born a Crime I was raring to go on this book. But it's chalk and cheese. Trevor Noah is a brilliant writer, and Phoebe Robinson might be all right with the politically involved skits but a book? It's like bloggers writing a book. Just because you can write in one way doesn't mean that you will be equally able in other formats or genres.

It came across to me like going to a comedy theatre. No matter how hard the comedian tries, it's just so obvious that the insights and jokes aren't fresh, it's the same show repeated nightly only the audience differs.

Caribbean women and hair-touching.

Why 2 star if I didn't finish it? I could have, it wasn't that bad, but there are other potential 5 star books I would really rather read.
Profile Image for Esil.
1,118 reviews1,492 followers
October 16, 2016
I was inspired to read You Can't Touch My Hair at GR friend Taryn's suggestion as a counterpoint to Jodie Picoult's portrayal of Ruth in Great Small Things. I didn't know anything about Phoebe Robinson -- who I now know is a young writer, feminist, actor and comic -- but I'm glad I read her book of personal essays. She writes about her views and experiences of being an African American woman -- she writes about experiences as a student, in casting calls, on the set, shopping, dealing with her hair and much more. She doesn't purport to speak on behalf of all African American women, but to the extent that she sheds some light on the experience of living in the shadow of mainstream expectations and stereotypes, her anecdotes and observations go well beyond the personal. She has a great narrative style -- she's funny but direct and unapologetic. Robinson's book is a timely and compelling counterpoint to the ugly morass into which current American politics have descended. I suspect that the audio version of her book would be even better because there's a lovely spoken quality to her writing. Thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for an opportunity to read an advance copy.
Profile Image for Taylor Reid.
Author 22 books226k followers
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October 19, 2023
Phoebe Robinson is so freakin funny. I laughed out loud multiple times.
Profile Image for Carmen.
2,025 reviews2,425 followers
July 4, 2019
Case in point: One time, my compensation for doing a stand-up show was a vibrator with a computer-USB-cord charger, which I have refused to use till this day because I'm pretty sure a vibe teaming up with a laptop in order to power on is what Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines was warning us about. 74

I have no idea who Phoebe Robinson is. I might have been exposed to her at some moment while reading BITCH, but if I was I have no memory of it.

This book might be a little hard to get into. Perhaps you think it is a bit rough in the beginning. But the book gets better and better the deeper you get into it, so my advice to anyone who is struggling is to keep reading. If you still don't like it halfway through, give up. But Robinson's style and humor grew on me the more I read.

The only complaint I have about this book is Robinson's pop-culture references. This book is steeped (STEEPED) in pop-culture references. It is nonstop. There's about 5-10 on every single page.

I'm like an 88-year-old when it comes to pop culture. I just do not watch TV and never really have. I've watched very little TV in my life. Music is another thing I don't get. I listen to music but pay almost zero attention to song names or artist names. Sports, zero. Know close to nothing. The only thing Robinson referenced that I got was movies. I know movies.

This lack of pop-culture knowledge was unfortunate for me because Robinson writes like, "Racism! Do you remember when pop-culture reference said "..." on pop-culture reference? And everyone freaked out? It was just like when pop-culture reference did pop-culture reference on pop-culture reference! Ha ha ha." And I'm like, "I don't understand what you just said. I can't tell if it's funny or not because I have no idea what you are talking about."

I think this book would be better suited for a person who ingests a lot of pop-culture. It's extremely pop-culture heavy. Robinson was constantly referring to people and shows and songs and singers that I'd never heard of. I'm tv-and-music-deficient. Whoosh! All that went right over my head, and it was a good chunk of material.

Robinson is funny. She gets funnier and funnier as the book goes on - or at least it seems that way as you adjust to and get used to her cadence and sense of humor. The book gave me some genuine out-loud laughs.

Robinson's writing actually reminds me a lot of Nenia Campbell's style and humor when she pens her reviews. They both have the same sort of sarcastic humor and non-stop aside jokes that pepper their writing. I couldn't stop thinking of Nenia Campbell as I read this book, which wasn't a bad thing. I also think Nenia Campbell is much more familiar with pop-culture than I am.

Robinson makes some amazing points about racism, sexism, feminism, and the patriarchy. She does this in a humorous way, this is a 'fun' read about these topics, which is rare. I think my favorite parts were the parts where Robinson describes her real-life run-ins with racism and sexism. I hope a lot of non-female and non-black people pick up this book, because it's very eye-opening and very educational... yet funny and relatable. There are tons of amazing books about sexism and racism, but - as Robinson points out in this book - sometimes they are unread by the people who need to read them most because they are seen as "accusational" or "depressing." Sad that we need to sugarcoat our attempts to make the world less racist and sexist, but it's true. And Robinson does a great job at it.

I think Robinson illustrates the daily trials of living as a black woman in the U.S. of A. very well. She has some great anecdotes, and she's wonderful at making it clear how much bullshit she has to deal with on a day-to-day basis.

I ended up really enjoying the book.

TL;DR A funny, shining book about sexism and racism in America... or more to the point, in Robinson's life thus far. The only caveat I have to give you is that the book is very pop-culture heavy, and if you are not immersed in pop-culture, a lot of these jokes are going to make no sense to you.

Still, as the book goes on and you get more and more used to Robinson's writing style and humor, you can't escape a belly laugh once in a while. She's funny. :D I had to end up giving this five stars, especially since she ends the book by talking about the bullshit misogyny that capped off the KINGSMAN movie. She's just on-point in this book, what can I say? I'm looking forward to reading Everything's Trash, But It's Okay later.

UPDATE: 07/04/2019
"Don't Touch My Hair" by Solange Knowles
https://youtu.be/YTtrnDbOQAU
Profile Image for Book Riot Community.
1,084 reviews302k followers
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July 5, 2017
This book had been on my radar since before it published in October of last year. A collection of personal essays that tackle issues of race and identity, it gave me a glimpse of racism as it is experienced by marginalized populations, in much the same way Claudia Rankine’s Citizen did. Except that, where Citizen was lyrical, a breathtaking work of prose poetry, Robinson’s book is knock-you-on-your-ass hysterical. Which makes sense, considering that Robinson is a stand-up comic with a resume that includes Late Night With Seth Meyers, Broad City, and her WNYC podcast 2 Dope Queens. I feel grateful that she has so much out there that I can still explore.

— Steph Auteri


from The Best Books We Read In March 2017: http://bookriot.com/2017/04/04/riot-r...
____________________


An utter delight of a book, from Jessica Williams’ forward to Phoebe Robinson’s last page. You Can’t Touch My Hair is a collection of essays dripping in humor, honesty, and pop-culture references that weaves effortlessly between important conversations about race/gender to silly conversations like ranking U2 members for bow-chicka-wow-wow purposes. And if Jessica Williams doesn’t have a book deal yet someone needs to get on that.

–Jamie Canaves


from The Best Books We Read In June 2016: http://bookriot.com/2016/06/29/riot-r...
335 reviews310 followers
February 8, 2017
Comedian Phoebe Robinson addresses race, gender, and pop culture in this collection of eleven humorous essays. Robinson is the creator and one of the hosts of the 2 Dope Queens podcast. She also has a series on YouTube called Woke Bae. I'm behind the times and had never encountered her work before! The foreword is written by 2 Dope Queens cohost and Daily Show correspondent Jessica Williams, which is what made me interested in this book. It's not the typical celebrity memoir that I could breeze through in a few hours, but it's entertaining and thought-provoking.

The kind of growth required to move past race is nearly impossible to achieve because racism is rooted in the foundation of America. … Without awareness or acknowledgment of how these things have left a permanent stain on our country, then no amount of blind hope is going to remedy the erosion that race and racism have done to this country.


Robinson writes about her experiences as a black woman, both in and out of the entertainment industry. Some of the issues she covers are America's uncomfortable relationship with black hair, the evolution of her attitude towards her own hair, being the black friend, Hollywood casting, microaggressions, coded language, and the angry black woman myth. She reveals the subtle ways that racism and sexism are ingrained in modern culture. These are all serious topics, but the book is not an academic treatise. She tackles all the issues with her unique brand of humor. Even though I have zero comedic timing, I was able to enjoy the print version because her writing voice is so distinctive. However, I would've opted for the audio book if given the chance.

The writing style is conversational. You can get a good sense of her writing by visiting her blog, Blaria. She uses a lot of hashtags and modern slang ("#WayHarshTai", "ridic.edu"). Every paragraph is packed with pop culture references. Best part? I actually recognized 95% of them, which is rare for me! If you came of age in the late 90s/early 00s and have a deep appreciation of The West Wing and Shonda Rhimes's productions, you should definitely be in the clear! She had my interest clinched with mentions '99 Ricky Martin and Kids Incorporated. I do get a little bored when I'm not as invested in the people or shows mentioned, like the "Ranking Members of U2 in the Order of Whom I Want to Sleep With" section of "My Nine Favorite Guilty Pleasures". I was most interested in her personal experiences that diverged from my own, so my mind would start drifting off when it veered away from those topics. While not all of the book resonated with me personally, she struck a perfect balance between light and heavy subject matter.

Explaining your life to a world that doesn't care to listen is often more draining than living in it.


There's something for everyone in this book. Many readers will be able to directly relate to Robinson's experiences. For others, there are important lessons: being aware that racism still exists in a variety of ways and to not dismiss someone else's experience simply because it isn't your own or it's too uncomfortable to deal with. Two of the anecdotes were especially memorable for me: the director who called Robinson "uppity" and the classmate who wrote creative fiction about a romance between a slave and a slave owner's daughter. Instead of learning and gaining a more well-rounded viewpoint, these two immediately put their defenses up and completely flipped out when confronted. (Coincidently, I read these chapters when White Fragility Training was making the rounds on Facebook.)

Despite the seriousness and importance of the topics addressed, it's one of the rare books that has actually made me laugh out loud. It's also one of the few celebrity memoirs that made me think, even weeks after I read the last page. If you are interested in further exploring the topics addressed in this book, you might be interested in:
Born a Crime by Trevor Noah (pub. date 11/15/16) - This one is about coming of age in South Africa from a male point of view, but there is a lot of overlap with themes. (Humor/Nonfiction)
Citizen by Claudia Rankine - Especially the sections on microaggressions and Serena Williams. (Nonfiction)
We Love You Charlie Freeman - Charlotte's chapters/Enrolling in an predominately white school/Coded language. (Fiction)


______________________
I received this book for free from Penguin Random House in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review. The publication date is October 4, 2016.
Profile Image for Trish.
1,422 reviews2,710 followers
February 7, 2017
We may not be in a post racial society but I tell you what: when funky, funny Phoebe can tell us what white people do that makes her crazy, and why she doesn’t want to be anybody’s token black friend, I think we’ve moved the needle since the last century. I remember the first time an African man told me that the only pictures he’d had taken in his years of graduate school were those taken by a Singaporean man who knew how to get the camera to register his skin color and expression. Robinson says something similar here: maybe it’s best if we first acknowledge a color difference before we declare it doesn’t matter.

Robinson does plenty of things in this “breakout book deal” but the thing that drew me in was the chance to learn, unfiltered, how black women had such dope-fantastic hair while white folk have to make do with boring thin stuff that flies away and looks pretty much the same everyday, no matter what we do to it. I first learned a little about the time and energy and money serious black hair coiffeurs require in Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s novel Americanah, but now I think I get it. And no, I don’t think anyone should have to do this so that other folks will love them more. It is, however, an art form, another art form that black folk have created, perfected, and strutted.

Shonda Rhimes, in her book Year of Yes, tells us as a teen she tried to get her hair looking like Diana Ross every morning before classes. Oh girl…I did the same thing with some magazine model or other whose look was so far from mine that a million years of evolution wouldn’t have changed that difference between us. It is definitely not worth the effort. And the “creamy crack” or “crack cream” (break me up, girl!) sounds positively dangerous. Forget it immediately. Get a wig if you want to toss straight hair so much and definitely don’t subject yourself to chemical burns. Come on. If that is what’s required, f- them. I wouldn’t do it. Who the heck is calling the shots here?

When Robinson describes a bedroom scene where the woman is wearing an elastic do-rag to protect her afro and she insists that a real man would still get a boner regardless, I laughed all right. But then it occurred to me that is the definition of drop-dead sexy: strong and sexy, when black womanhood doesn’t even need to fling her hair around to get to home base. She commands the stage. I’m impressed. Personally, I’d kill for the simplicity of a close crop and call it quits. But I ain’t no Phoebe Robinson.

Jessica Williams, Phoebe’s “werk wife,” writes the introduction to this book. Williams was a writer/correspondent on The Daily Show and now the two perform standup at various locations in Brooklyn and work a podcast (WYNC) called 2 Dope Queens. Robinson had a vision of where she wanted to go and to that end began a blog called Blaria in 2014. When the Robinson and Williams standup routine started to take off, a new piece in the NYT tried to keep track. Robinson also has a talk-show style podcast she started last year called Sooo Many White Guys. She's angling for Oprah's job, and I think she's becoming a worthy successor. She certainly has drive.

If the material is sometimes juvenile, well, juvenile can be funny. There is one thing that may eventually limit the range of the women, though: all their references for jokes relate to TV or movies. When it works, it’s very good indeed, but not everyone is so deep into popular culture, or have looked at it with such seriousness and depth of understanding. It is fascinating to watch Robinson deconstruct an old movie like a college professor does a piece of literature, but then our mind starts thinking…what else can this woman do that would be—less fun, maybe—but more important?

Then I remember what she is doing, desensitizing race relations, telling white folk what bothers black folk, sharing some intimacies and some vulnerabilities, and I realize she is doing exactly what she needs to be doing right now, and she is doing it funny, she is doing it sexy, she is doing it in braids, in long soft curls, in dreads, and in a bust-'em afro. She’s strong, she’s sexy, she’s outspoken, and she’s unstoppable now. I’m a fan.

I have loaded a 2 Dope Queens holiday video podcast on my blog for you to see what you’re missing.
Profile Image for Monica.
780 reviews690 followers
December 11, 2018
I enjoyed this very smart and humorous book. This is not the stuff of Pulitzer, but I think Robinson has something here. I appreciated this book for the intelligent commentary on race and feminism and its youthful voice. The essays are uneven in quality that vacillate between utterly personal, emotional, intelligent and brilliant to sophmoric, juvenille and silly. Robinson is a standup comic and has a popular podcast that make fine use of both traits.

Overall I'm glad to have read the book and happy to recommend it. No minds were changed during the listening but I'm happy to report that in my view the current youthful generation seems to get it (examples of that are sometimes lacking in my own family...;-)). Robinson has proven to this old lady that she sees and understands the issues that (I think) are important and their impact on her generation and beyond. She's also happens to be quite funny and suprisingly optimistic.

4 Stars

Edited to Add: The use of John Hodgeman to pen a Letter to Olivia was genius!

Listened to the Audio version narrated by the author. It was superb.
Profile Image for Kay.
220 reviews
May 1, 2017
You Can't Touch My Hair is a good representation of today's pop culture, one replete with hostages, movie and music references. While this made it interesting for about the first 30% of the book, I found it very difficult to continue after "Dear Future Female President." While Phoebe's comedy is hilarious in its honesty and rawness, I wish issues raised in the latter part of the book seemed more like "first world problems." Moreover, in some instances Phoebe came across as judgemental and whiny there was even an instance of fat shaming, making the read extremely jarring, mores because this is often waved off as totally acceptable and understandable.

Overall, I found this book to be okay. What started off with a bang started to get less interesting as it progressed.


Thank you Netgalley and the publisher for approving my request for a free digital copy in exchange for a honest review.
Profile Image for Kelly (and the Book Boar).
2,819 reviews9,511 followers
March 28, 2019
Find all of my reviews at: http://52bookminimum.blogspot.com/

I came upon this book when I went to the library’s website looking for an audio version of Tracy Morgan’s book which they did not have and they offered me this instead . . . .



I mean maybe just a lil’ bit. You would think there would be like 10,000,000 other former SNL cast member memoirs or middle-age stand-up comic bios to drop on me before a 30-year old podcaster, but whatever. I’m an easy sell so I downloaded it.

In case you couldn’t tell from the above, I had zero clue who this girl is. (But hey, at least I knew what Upright Citizens Brigade is since I’m a geezer and nearly every comic I ever loved either sprouted from there or the Groundlings (Ha! Sprouted from the Ground(lings) – so funny. Or not.).) People are always telling me about podcasts, but who the eff has time for that? I am old, I work full time and I also have a family to try and keep alive. Heck, I just started doing audiobooks like 17 minutes ago and ancestry.com said I am 100% Bibliophile so that makes zero sense. I wouldn’t have the first clue of how to even find a podcast – let alone a good one – and I seriously doubt there is one magical enough to keep my interest for multiple episodes (or whatever the fuck a podcast show is called). When I hear the word podcast I think of someone sitting in their mom’s basement/attic turned “sound studio” with some half-ass equipment that picks up sounds no one ever wants to hear like how they aren’t super great at breath control while speaking or that they are a producer of extra saliva. And while the production quality was sound (Ha! Sound! *isthisthingon???*), my listening experience was the equivalent of any time I ever dared to find out what any [insert any name at all here - I mean really ANY name because they are all exactly the same] wannabe famous YouTuber had to say about things – except I couldn’t see this broad make what I can only imagine were equally annoying faces to go along with her eye-twitch inducing delivery. These .gifs pretty much sum things up . . . .

There was a lot of this . . . .



With sprinkles of this . . . .



And if you took a drink every time she did this . . . .



You would die before the paramedics even got the tube down your gullet in order pump all the alcohol out of your stomach.

There was also a Bizarro World factor where this woman who is a decade younger than me somehow only talked about things that even I thought were dated. Seriously, was Carrie Bradshaw really that much of an influence on your life?????



If so, let me quote The Donald: #sad.

As for content? If a middle-aged white chick in flyover country doesn’t learn anything new, surely it can’t be that . . . . .



Maybe I would have found tidbits of interest if I had opted for the physical version. However, since I was so distracted by the bleeding out of my ears from listening to this torture session, I’m choosing to offer up a couple of other selections that might be of interest (and Imma do Netflix programs which is pretty much unheard of for me) to mix things up. For those of you looking for the answers regarding hair and why you can’t touch it, look no further than the sheer perfection which is . . . . .



I think I’ve watched this 10 times.

And for those of you who have an interest in culture, stereotypes and food . . . . .



It’s simply brilliant.

I’m giving this 2 Stars pretty much out of the goodness of my cold black heart and because, like I said above, I may have not wanted to drive off a bridge if I had read this rather than listened to it. But as far as the audio goes?????

Profile Image for Jessica Woodbury.
1,926 reviews3,127 followers
June 29, 2016
Phoebe Robinson's delivers more laughs per page than any other book of essays by a female comedian in recent memory. (Yes, I'm including Tina Fey. And Amy Poehler.) Not only that, she dispenses wisdom and tackles issues that go beyond the typical "being-a-woman-in-comedy-is-hard" thing a lot of these books do.

You know how sometimes you're reading the new Mindy Kaling book and she'll start talking about the realities of being a woman of color in entertainment and you think she's just about to start going for it and then she starts talking about zits or B. J. Novak or some other thing and never really goes there? Phoebe Robinson goes there. This book is about those realities, and yet it is so constantly hilarious that it's hard to figure out how she does it. She talks about microaggressions and then she's ranking the members of U2 based on bone-ability. This tightrope walk defines the whole book and it's pretty masterful.

Often with this kind of book that's kind of a mix between essay and memoir there will be the occasional weak section or the short, fluffy chapters thrown in so it doesn't look to short. But not this one. Every chapter felt solid and consistent and you could read for a long stretch or a little bit and feel really good about it.

If you're a fan of the 2 Dope Queens podcast, this book is probably already high up on your list. It will only confirm that Phoebe is even funnier than you thought she was.
Profile Image for Julie Ehlers.
1,117 reviews1,603 followers
February 7, 2017
This made some excellent points and I would not want to discourage anyone from reading it, but I think I was just not in the target audience, agewise. The relentless pop-culture references and meandering style made me feel like my brain was leaking out of my ears.
Profile Image for Taryn.
1,215 reviews227 followers
October 16, 2016
Forgive me for this, but can I just say I am Super First-World Frustrated that I didn't get to listen to an audio version of this book? I knew as soon as I read that Phoebe Robinson of the 2 Dope Queens podcast had a book coming out that I wanted it in audio. I mean, why wouldn't I? I've read a bunch of books this year by comedians, and there's nothing better than hearing their words straight from the horses' hilarious mouths. But every time I checked Amazon in the months leading up to release date, they showed only paperback and ebook as purchase options. I sighed, shrugged, and requested an ebook version—and the entire time I was reading, I was imagining how much better the book would be if I could hear it in Phoebe's voice.

So imagine my surprise, dismay, and eyebrow twitchiness when I just checked Amazon to confirm that there really is no audio version available—you know, before I post something on the Internet claiming it as fact—and there it is, smirking in my face—the audio version! The temerity! It's a good thing I am not a comic book villain and thus unable to shoot Hate Lasers from my eyeballs, because my laptop screen would have been toast.

I guess my loss is your gain (you lucky bastards), because I'm here to tell you from personal experience, listening to this book is almost certainly going to be more fun than reading a print copy, especially if you haven't ever had the pleasure of experiencing Robinson's antics on her podcast. I've listened to a handful of episodes in the past few weeks so I was able to color in the gaps with my imagination, but trust me, Robinson has a unique voice and it's a lot funnier out loud.

She covers a wide range of topics, including microaggressions, Michael Fassbender, being called “uppity,” a list of demands for the first female president, and as you might have guessed, black hair and why white people lose their minds over it. She makes even the tough parts at least a little funny (which, as she points out, is necessary to avoid being labeled an angry black woman). She walks that tightrope between too silly and too serious really well. The best comedians know you can unload a lot of truth on people if you package it up the right way.

With regards to Plume and NetGalley for the review copy (even though, you know, it wasn't an audio version). On sale now!

More book recommendations by me at www.readingwithhippos.com
Profile Image for Brown Girl Reading.
387 reviews1,503 followers
October 18, 2017
I started reading this in paperback and couldn't get into it. Allyn suggested I listen to it on audio and I have to be honest, it's the best way to stay interested in it. It should have only come out in audio. IT just doesn't work on paper. As a whole I liked but I didn't love it. She got me to smirk and shake my head Yes quite a bit but there was something that didn't win me over totally. If you're interested in this book and you're not familiar with pop culture, you should give this one a mss. You won't understand the jokes if you don't know who or what she's referencing.
Profile Image for Teri.
92 reviews6 followers
January 13, 2017
DNF. I wanted to like this book so bad but just... couldn't. I didn't know Phoebe Robinson before borrowing this book from the library (audio and physical copies) but I was attracted to the title and cover. Quintessential black girl, right? The foreword by Jessica Williams seemed promising however, it just falls flat after about the first 50 pages. I thought I was going to be swimming in Dear White People-esque tales and truths but Ms. Robinson did NOT deliver. She is EXTRA and not in a good way. It actually makes the book is hard to follow because of her many ad-libs and mini-rants. I wanted to like Phoebe but she's like that random girl who butts in when you're having pleasant conversation with friends with stories of her crazy weekend that was really just crazy lame. (9 Guilty Pleasures? Really? WHO TF CARES?!) Audiobooks read by the author are normally GREAT but I think Robinson's narration takes away from the stuff that was even a little bit funny. Her voice is a mix of monotone and sounding like she's trying too hard to be funny on her joke delivery. *rimshot* I tried. I really tried.
Profile Image for Never Without a Book.
469 reviews92 followers
August 3, 2018
Not going to rate this one or give it a review. She sugar coated black girl struggles. 😑
Profile Image for Bookishrealm.
3,241 reviews6,431 followers
February 6, 2017
This was definitely an interesting book. And I have a few thoughts so let me go ahead and lay them out:

-Do no be misguided into thinking that this book is solely about hair. It does have sections on hair; however, for the most part this book is definitely more about the experience of black women in America. She also touches on women in general, but for the most part it does focus on what it's like to grow up, live, and attempt to be successful when you are a black woman.
-This book does have some crude humor, but it works and I loved that she included her humor to make this book even easier to relate to.
-If you don't want to hear the truth about the black experience in America then don't read this book because Robinson doesn't allow anyone to censor or silence her and I loved that about her. She definitely took control of her story and that's what I loved about this book.
-There are some sections of the book in which Robinson proves to be a little wordy and she rambles to the point that can bore the reader, but I think overall the information contained in the book is worth reading.
-I read about 80 pages and I honestly thought I wasn't going to like it; however, the more I read it and the more topics that were covered I realized how much I truly appreciated reading about the information she was discussing within the book. It was amazing how she took so many seemingly simple topics and explained them from the perspective of a black American female---and this is something that I definitely needed.

Overall, I enjoyed the book and I would recommend it to any one that is wishing to learn more about the experience of black females in America. I think this is one that I will either do a full written review for or at least a discussion video! : )
Profile Image for Christine.
7,223 reviews569 followers
March 25, 2017
In the sake of fairness, I should note that like Robinson, I think Lisa Bonet is the da bomb. I always loved Denise best, mostly because she was the oldest girl who was regularly on the Cosby Show. However, I do think it is interesting that Robinson slights as proof as Bonet's awesome ablitiy her husbands (Lennie Kratvitz and Jason Moma). Not that I blame her, and not that I am innocent of doing it. Perhaps that itself is proof about why feminism is so needed today.

The best essays in this collection are the ones about hair, hence the title. As a white person, I never knew people asked African Americans if they could touch the woman's hair - it never occured to me that any such request was anything other than rude. But when I started teaching, I did learn about the rude behavior.

Robinson's essays on hair are also about why women style thier hair (and some of these points are true for any woman). It balances nicely Chris Rock's movie about hair. I wish this had been out about two years ago when a student of mine wrote her research paper about the issue. I would love to know what the student thought of this book.

The most compelling essay outside of the hair is about Robinson's experience on television or attempting to audtion for roles.

The pop culture tone of the book can wear a little thing. There are almost too many jokes.
Profile Image for Renee.
258 reviews24 followers
July 7, 2017
Let me start by saying that this title is everything. I have curly hair, and people ask to touch it ALL.The.TIME. As soon as I heard about this book, I knew I had to read it. Phoebe Robinson is hilarious. I want to hang out with her, and I feel like she's my new literary best friend. This was a total blast, but a smart one filled with perspective and power. I switched between the audiobook and physical book,  and laughed out loud many times throughout. Nothing is better than listening to a comedian narrate their own book. It's amazing. She's a comedian and writer, and her talents come together beautifully in this short book of essays. Phoebe is bold and unapologetic in her takes on race, feminism, sexuality, and more. 

I loved, LOVED, Phoebe's sections on music. I may not love U2 the way she does, but I don't listen to much music that would be expected for a non-white person. She talks about how people assume she knows what's new in hip hop, when in reality she's about to listen to Arcade Fire or Phil Collins. Cultural stereotypes, gotta love them. 

Phoebe, you'll never read this, but I need to talk to you! This book is written as though only people of colour (POC for short) will be reading it. I wanted Phoebe to be a little more inclusive with her audience, to assume that enlightened or curious (or any!) white people may want to read this book! I think she may keep her non POC readers a little at bay with this assumption, but hey, I'm a biracial reader, so maybe I just see both sides of the fence?

Speaking of being biracial, I adored Phoebe's letters to her infant niece Olivia. She offers solutions for getting through life female and biracial. She even offers her a plethora of biracial celebrities to look to for identity: Lisa Bonet, Prince, Bob Marley, and more!

Don't let all the fun fool you, Phoebe is on a mission with this book. She dives deep into her personal experiences with sexism and racism with a strength that I truly admire. She puts herself out there, exposing times when she felt weak and used, and made to feel less than. She discusses the young black people killed at the hands of police in America, and injustices that are difficult to swallow.

I loved reading about these topics in a practical, everyday sort of manner. Phoebe, at least for me, is so relatable that it made this book feel like a conversation with a good friend. I really enjoyed this, and will be looking out for whatever Phoebe does next. 
Profile Image for Michelle.
653 reviews192 followers
May 25, 2017
Phoebe Robinson is a comedian, actress and writer. Her work has appeared in Vanity Fair, Huffington Post and the New York Times. TV credits include NBC's Last Comic Standing, the Today show, Late Night with Seth Meyers, and Last Call with Carson Daly. You Can’t Touch My Hair is her first book and has been featured by Goodreads Choice Awards as one of the Best Humor Books of 2016 .

“But what will the White people think?”
Comical yet spot on in her delivery Robinson goes beyond merely illuminating microaggressions like strangers touching our crowns. You Can’t Touch My Hair tackles everything from being the token Black friend to being called “uppity” and other racial slights that typically go by unanswered.

Some of the topics she touches upon include:
*Being expected to be the representative for all Black
people when hot button topics arise in discussions*

*Double standards for women in the entertainment
business and society at large*

*Being labeled the “Angry Black Woman” whenever
you disagree with someone or feel violated in some
way*


Profile Image for Ashley Daviau.
2,262 reviews1,059 followers
July 10, 2021
This book shook me up and woke me right the fuck up. It made me uncomfortable and at certain points I felt myself getting defensive and I had to stop myself and ask myself why I was getting defensive and work through it to realize I was feeling that way because everything Robinson was saying was true and I was guilty of doing the things she so eloquently and concisely spoke about. Robinson is unapologetic throughout this book and the way she writes is so accessible and real because she uses humour and pop culture references and it feels like she’s speaking directly to you without it feeling like a lesson. She speaks about her experiences as a Black woman throughout and she truly opened my eyes to things I had never seen or considered or thought about before. This book is a game changer and everyone should be reading it!
Profile Image for Hannah Rose.
365 reviews51 followers
September 5, 2016
"My driver looked like Villain #4 from the Taken movies, you know, just real Slavic AF" says the author who swears she would make white people rub her legs down with lotion as a greeting if she were queen of a country.

Maybe I'm not the right audience for a book that uses hashtags and laughs at its own jokes with an L to the O to the L, but I just couldn't get jiggy with Robinson's sense of humor. Not my cup of tea.
Profile Image for britt_brooke.
1,646 reviews132 followers
April 18, 2018
“Whenever someone tells you that you're doing XYZ like a girl, then you can whip out, "Thank you, hater, you're my motivator," and then go back to being XX chromosome AF.”

In this essay collection, Robinson speaks frankly about what it’s like to be black, to be female, and to be a black female. I really appreciate her insight, incredibly valid points, and smart sense of humor. Her narration had me LOLing. She’s got me feeling XX chromosome AF!
Profile Image for Erin .
1,625 reviews1,523 followers
October 16, 2016
A fun, smart, & witty collection of essay's about class & black feminism. It was not laugh out loud funny but it was definitely funny in a real & relatable way. I highly recommend it.
Profile Image for Alana Benjamin.
135 reviews64 followers
December 29, 2016
*I received this book for free through Goodreads Giveaways*

Two things.
1. I think this book would be better consumed as an audiobook because the jokes, colloquialisms and popular culture references would land better and be better understood in the overall context of the short stories.

2. If you are unfamiliar with TV, movie and music references in the past 30 years, most of the references will probably go over your head.

That being said, I felt that this book had more misses than hits. The first short short 'From Little Rock Nine to Nappy Hair, Don't Care in Eighteen-and-Half-ish Years' was really touching and I think EVERY black girl can relate. I thought the second story 'A Brief History of Black Hair in Film, TV, Music and Media' was a great nostalgic flashback. My favorite line of the book was 'bitch is an insomniac, that's how woke she is.'

After that, it went progressively downhill for me. I appreciated the essays 'Welcome to Being Black', 'How to Avoid Being the Black Friend', 'Uppity' and 'The Angry Black Woman Myth'. I feel like these were stories you can share with your 'friend' who doesn't fully get the black experience. They are light enough that the heavy aspects of the conversation do not get lost in translation.

Everything else is a miss for me.

Overall, I think I was just not the target audience for this book. I am a fan of her podcasts and standup but I think her jokes don't really translate in the literary format ...for me at least.

Just a side bar. I don't think Prince is bi-racial. A fact check is definitely necessary there.
Profile Image for Liz.
251 reviews2,066 followers
February 10, 2017
Why I picked this up: #DiverseAThon + the cover! Also, it looked like it would be a funny read but at the same time a good dose of truth.

Did it deliver: YES.
- She has a chapter on hair, and she continues to talk about black culture as well as how she got into comedy and writing.
- She writes a letter to the future female POTUS and several letters to her young niece.
- She is so very, very funny. And honest. She talks openly about things that have happened because people judged her based on her skin color. She also talks about casting calls that are absolutely real and ridiculous.
- She's just amazing.

What I learned:
- All of her bits about Black People Secrets
- I knew very basic things about black hair, but this dove a bit deeper. She definitely had fun with it, but also I felt like I learned a lot from it.
- John Hodgman is literally the whitest man, but sees his privilege.
- I should probably binge Scandal and HTGAWM soon!
Profile Image for Erica.
1,472 reviews498 followers
March 22, 2018
I'm going with 3 stars on this, the audiobook, specifically.

First, though, I hope Phoebe appreciates that this is #69 on my Biographical shelf. I feel that some of her humor is juvenile enough for that to make some sort of impact.

Ok, so all of you who are familiar with Phoebe Robinson, like if you've read her blog or listened to the podcast she does with her work-wife, Jessica Williams, are already well aware of her communication style.
I went into this blind because I am an old person and not hip to today's youth indie trend culture. If you, too, are unaware, like I am, here's a quick rundown on Phoebe: She's a comedian and writer and discusses race, feminism, and pop culture. You probably could have figured that out simply by reading the summary for this book or her Goodreads bio, but whatever. I deal in information, people, and sharing is caring.

In these essays, Robinson touches on often-trod ground but via a younger perspective. I got the sense she expected her audience to be even younger than she is (31 at the time of writing) because she kept throwing out references that were appropriate to her age (and a few that predated even me and I am a crone!) and then had to explain them because they were too old for the reader. It was almost as if this were geared toward a young- or new-adult audience.

She starts with black hair or, as my hair magician likes to call it, ethnic hair, which I find amusing, as if all hair comes in Ethnic or White. But anyway, if you're black, you already know all this but, as she points out, no one was talking about black hair when she was young and it only came in a few styles so it was kind of a secret thing but now pretty much anything is embraced by mainstream culture ... only ... not really. If you're white and haven't read or seen anything that touches on what it's like to have kinky hair, then this will all be news and you will learn a lot, which is pretty cool.
You know what's not so cool, though? The media continuing to embrace black stereotypes on both sides of the screen, which Phoebe breaks down in her next topic. Until very recently (thank you, Shonda Rhimes), TV and movies portrayed typecast black characters. Robinson explains that casting calls ask for those typecast black characters so it's been hard to break this cycle. However, it can and will be broken as more people who are not straight, fully-abled, white men start working in production and direction and writing and casting and all those other jobs that create popular entertainment.
She talks about feminism and how to not be a judgey asshole toward people who are not you. For instance, she talks about "guilty" pleasures, things which any sane member of society shouldn't enjoy because of stigmas surrounding said things, quite often related to the stigmas surrounding anything female or feminine. But who gets to say what a person can or can't enjoy and what does anyone else care if someone likes to watch TV that is considered bad by the masses? Norms are a societal construct and the pursuit of pleasure, as long as it's not hurting anyone, should only be defined by the pleasure-seeker. So if you like painting your toenails pink while watching "Sex in the City," that's fine. That's not one of her examples, by the way. That's something I judge because I do not like painting my toenails pink and I did not like "Sex in the City" but, again, only I can define my own pleasure, not anyone else's. One of her examples was looking yourself up on the internet because, apparently, everyone does it but nobody admits it. I disagree with her there because I think a lot of people admit to Googling themselves. I mean, where's the shame? How are you going to know what other people are going to see if they Google you if you don't do it yourself? Stay armed, people! KNOW YOUR INFORMATION!
She also talks about being female in a male-dominated career (comedy), something we've been hearing more about since Louis C.K. got busted for being a harasser. It's pretty dismal that, despite the ever increasing number of mainstream female comics, the industry is still so incredibly bleak when it comes to being a woman comedian.
She tells the reader, up front, that there are going to be zillions of pop culture references all throughout her essays and she is not wrong. I got 98% of what she was talking about, only getting lost in the most recent phenomena. I appreciated that she has a huge chunk of nerd in her, I felt like I could connect with her if we had to have a conversation because we got stuck in an elevator together. So while I normally sigh heavily over pop culture references, these ones worked and made sense and I was not left on the outskirts of the essays because I didn't get what she was talking about. Hooray!
Overall, she shared lots of insights that either resonated with me or that made me go, "Oh! Yeah, sure, I get that now. Cool."
So why didn't this get the 4 stars the actual content merited?

I am too old for this shit, people. Too damn old, too curmudgeonly, too unwilling to embrace certain changes in society because I am comfortable and don't care about your comfort. Obviously.
So you know how sorority girls talk on TV? Or Tom Haverford (played by Aziz Ansari) in "Parks and Recreation?" With the whine and the holding onto words for way too loooo-oooong and the making of cutesy words dot com-a-rama and the overall juvenile way of speaking? You know, like we all did once but then stopped doing outside of our circle of friends who also used to talk like that? The majority of this audiobook is read in that voice. I felt like I was sitting in Starbucks, one table over from some 20-year-old talking on her iPhone to her bestieeeee, which is weird because I don't go to Starbucks and do 20-year-olds even know they can talk on their phones to anyone other than their parents? Is that something of which they're aware?

So what I'm saying, and probably doing so in the shittiest and potentially most racist, in addition to age-ist, way possible is that, for old ears like mine, her reading style starts off grating, goes to cute for a bit (translation: I got used to it), but then goes right back to grating (translation: I had enough.) It's the whine. I cannot deal with the whine. There is no reason to whine like that as an adult. And I completely understand that I now sound like the old person who complained about kids these days using terms like, "Groovy" or "Wicked" or "Cray-cray" or, worse, the old fuddy duddy who went off on eubonics because it wasn't English or was, at the very least, a terrible bastardization of our fine [school-taught white people] language. I know I'm doing that and I know it's stupid and I also know that my irritation at that speaking style kept me from appreciating the actual content of the book as much as I should have.

Aaaand, the musical interludes between essays did not work for me. At all. It sounded like something you'd hear in a trendy dressing room...or, worse, on a trendy vlog where you're being shown the outfits coming out of the trendy dressing room. Musical interludes of that length may work to kill time in podcasts but it's too much for an audiobook. TOO MUCH! *shaking my old lady cane*

This is one of those books I should have read with my eyeballs, not my earholes. Unless she spelled "Fine" as "Fi-yi-yi-yi-yine," which is how she pronounced it (with a whine) In that case, I should have found the abridged notes and just read those.

Highly recommended to people 31 and younger who have their finger on the pulse of popular culture. Recommended for everyone who needs or wants to hear perspectives on feminism and race relations in America. Not as recommended for hateful crones like myself.
Profile Image for Lauren .
1,834 reviews2,549 followers
Read
March 8, 2021
Some hits right on target, but a lot of misses too. I enjoyed her stories of childhood and her work as a comedian, and the internet LOLspeak and copious pop culture references started cute and funny, and by pg 100 were "annoying AF". Robinson is a brilliant critic and observer, but the writing style took away from that. Unfortunately, her important words won't age well due to this fact.

Profile Image for Barbara (The Bibliophage).
1,091 reviews166 followers
July 9, 2017
You Can't Touch My Hair by Phoebe Robinson wasn't the book for me. I picked it up from the library on a whim, based on enthusiasm from Litsy users. Although I appreciated the look into a young African-American woman's life, her writing style left me cold. I guess I'm too old for hashtags and other such things in books.

It's odd that Robinson's use of her own vernacular or dialect didn't affect me the same way as Zora Neale Hurston's. It rang less true somehow, despite its nonfiction usage. Seriously, the word is truth not troof. I think what frustrated me was Robinson's point that she's a well-educated woman, which she chose to juxtapose against all the slang talk. It was jarring.

On the other hand, Robinson writes with strength about positive female body image, which I endorse heartily. Her essay "Dear Future Female President" was especially poignant (and still funny) given the outcome of the 2016 election.

Her essay about Black hair in the media reminded me that I still haven't watched Chris Rock's documentary about the same topic. Robinson did make me chuckle with her not-so-guilty pleasures, and I felt her frustration over the angry Black woman conundrum.

Robinson ends You Can't Touch My Hair with a few letters to her niece about the realities of an African-American woman's life. As often happens to me, in a case of bookish synchronicity I couldn't help but compare them to Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's Dear Ijeawele, or a Feminist Manifesto in Fifteen Suggestions. Robinson doesn't come out on top.

Nevertheless, not every essay hit home with me and I skimmed the end of the book. I think it's a case of "it's me, not you."
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