How Sassy Changed My Life: A Love Letter to the Greatest Teen Magazine of All Time
by Kara Jesella (Goodreads author!), Marisa Meltzer
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 390)
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2007
Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in November, 2007
recommends it for:
nostalgic GenXers
Perhaps unsurprisingly, I was a Sassy girl. Though I was a wee bit young for the demographic, being only nine or ten when the magazine started publishing and sixteen or so when it stopped, I loved my every issue of Sassy. It spoke to me. It taught me. It understood my freaky teen aged self.
And, according to Kara Jesella and Marisa Meltzer, authors of How Sassy Changed My Life: A Love Letter to the Greatest Teen Magazine of All Time, I was very much not alone. They posit that there are a whol...more
And, according to Kara Jesella and Marisa Meltzer, authors of How Sassy Changed My Life: A Love Letter to the Greatest Teen Magazine of All Time, I was very much not alone. They posit that there are a whol...more
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2008
So I didn't actually realize at the time that the magazine was that "different" or "revolutionary" than its contemporaries, but I did used to read my younger sister's Sassys once in a while, and although I noticed that they would reference less-than-mainstream topics like riot grrrl or indie bands, for some reason I was under the naive impression that all teen girls' magazines did the same. I might have first heard of Magnapop through the "Cute Band Alert," but can...more
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Read in June, 2008
I must say, I was quite impressed with Kara Jasella and Marisa Meltzer’s almost completely objective take on Sassy. True story: I was talking with my husband about how we should have his high school-age JV cheerleader daughter read up on Sassy in a not-so-subtle attempt to steer her on a social course that would potentially be more diversified. Just after that conversation, I read “the dark side” in Chapter 6, “The Sassy Ethos,” which politely chastises the magazin...more
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bookshelves:
2007reads,
non-fiction
Read in July, 2007
In 120 pages, this book manages to articulate all the reasons I loved this magazine, and all the reasons I eventually hated it (primarily staff turnover and the sale to a company that didn't give a rodent's behind about what made it great in the first place). Without going into great detail about every little staff squabble and behind-the-scenes politicking, How Sassy Changed My Life talks about the different personalities on the staff, how they came together, and how they eventually fel...more
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Read in June, 2007
recommends it for:
gen x girls
This book was sort of irresistable to me, because I'm sure that Sassy magazine changed my life, although I can't say how. I remember the first issue I bought. I'm still mad at myself to dumping my collection before I went to college. I can name the staff members, and reading this book, which is part history and part nostalgia, I can remember the articles they cite vividly.
This book covers the history of Sassy, from inception, inspired by Australia's Dolly magazine, to its sad final da...more
This book covers the history of Sassy, from inception, inspired by Australia's Dolly magazine, to its sad final da...more
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Read in February, 2008
recommends it for:
Sassy fans
I loved "Sassy" and I remember being so mad when it got turned into a section of "Teen" instead of being its own magazine. When I heard this book was coming out, it piqued my idle curiosity as to what actually happened to the magazine. This book can answer that question, and the tone is fairly light and gossipy. But I am in total agreement with another review of it that I read a while back - brainylady Alison's review (http://brainylady.blogspot.com.... She e...more
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Read in April, 2007
I did not learn anything from this book. Reading a book written by people who read the same magazine as you when you were little is, well, not pointless, but not real point-ful either.
I am just freaked out by nostalgia and attempts to justify it. Yes, this magazine did actually change my life, and I can see how someone who became a writer would want to document that fact. And yes I was really excited to get it in the mail from Amanda. And yes I probably am a writer (to the extent that I am...more
I am just freaked out by nostalgia and attempts to justify it. Yes, this magazine did actually change my life, and I can see how someone who became a writer would want to document that fact. And yes I was really excited to get it in the mail from Amanda. And yes I probably am a writer (to the extent that I am...more
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Read in September, 2007
I loved "Sassy" and one of the ten things I would have saved from my flooded house would have been my collection of "Sassy" magazines. Reading this book brought back many memories of high school and even college.
But nostalgia aside, this book is really just one long NYT "Sunday Styles" piece, which is a disappointment. I don't know quite what I wish it could have been, because really there's nothing more to say than, "the magazine was great." It would...more
But nostalgia aside, this book is really just one long NYT "Sunday Styles" piece, which is a disappointment. I don't know quite what I wish it could have been, because really there's nothing more to say than, "the magazine was great." It would...more
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nerd
Read in June, 2008
recommends it for:
people who are teen girls at heart
I discovered sassy right when it was about to disappear. it was just enough time to teach me that cool, smart magazines for girls did exist. (then, of course, I was abandoned to the world of seventeen for the rest of adolescence.) I knew that Sassy was awesome, but I also knew that Jane Pratt was one of the most reviled figures according to my current feminist media outlets (bitch, jezebel.com, etc.) - and I didn't really know how she could be both simultaneously responsi...more
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Read in April, 2007
recommends it for:
Eden
This book is fantastic, and anyone who loved Sassy growing up will appreciate ever bit of the story these authors tell. From the inception of Sassy as an American equivalent of the Australian mag Dolly, to the downfall of "Stepford Sassy".
Aside from remembering the articles mentioned in the book, my favorite moment was the bitter letter the new writers and editors of Sassy published in response to the flood of questions they were receiving about the changes that occurred when a ne...more
Aside from remembering the articles mentioned in the book, my favorite moment was the bitter letter the new writers and editors of Sassy published in response to the flood of questions they were receiving about the changes that occurred when a ne...more
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Read in December, 2007
recommends it for:
Fans of Sassy, Anyone who has ever wanted to start a magazine or zine
A really well-written and informative expose on the publishing industry, this book is a really fun and interesting read, especially for fans of Sassy, Jane, Venus, Bust, Bitch or any other feminist magazine that has ever been in print. Before I read the book, I went to a reading with the authors, and it was evident that they were very passionate about the magazine and the project, and that they had were very thorough in their research of the magazine (down to ordering old issues off of ebay), it...more
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Read in April, 2007
recommends it for:
Sassy readers
Back when I was a shy, awkward teenager who didn't fit into my small high school, Sassy magazine was my savior. It was written and edited by smart, outspoken women (and men) who weren't afraid to call themselves feminists. Sassy brought underground culture to small town girls like me who didn't have a cool big sister or older friend to show her the ropes. Sassy was written for the girl who didn't want to go to the prom, or who did, but wore combat boots and a vintage dress. The authors of this b...more
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Read in January, 2008
recommends it for:
people who used to read Sassy.
So. I grew up on Sassy magazine. When I learned about this book, I HAD to read it. This book is exactly what it claims to be and nothing more: a love letter to the greatest teen magazine of all time. It is a fabulous walk down memory lane for fans of Sassy who feel the need to reminisce about how much they love Christina Kelly. I admit, I did learn things about the magazine, like how hard it was for them to stay in business because advertisers weren't keen on their topic coverage (in retrospect,...more
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Read in June, 2007
recommends it for:
former readers of the magazine, journalism students
I dislike Jane Pratt. I always have. It was nice to see that I actually could point to documentation as to WHY I never liked her. ;)
Not that I know her, personally,...but clearly, from the pages of SASSY itself, we can tell she's a Snob.
But...
I LOVED everyone else. I loved this Magazine. My sister read it and passed on to Me, and I followed it to the End.
I remember the cattyness at the end, but the glorious wonderment in my Pre-Teen to Daria brain never swayed.
A girly rag that Actua...more
Not that I know her, personally,...but clearly, from the pages of SASSY itself, we can tell she's a Snob.
But...
I LOVED everyone else. I loved this Magazine. My sister read it and passed on to Me, and I followed it to the End.
I remember the cattyness at the end, but the glorious wonderment in my Pre-Teen to Daria brain never swayed.
A girly rag that Actua...more
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Read in May, 2007
recommends it for:
Sassy lovers!
Ah, middle school. That awkward time in life when you struggle to figure out who you are while battling raging hormones and omnipresent peer pressure. Just when I was on the verge of diving head first into a quasi-Heather/Mean Girls social situation, Sassy pulled me back from the brink and set me on the straight and narrow. Or, should I say, the feminist/riot grrl/it's-okay-to-be-different path. This book chronicles just how ground-breaking Sassy was at the time. While most teen magazines w...more
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Did you read Sassy? Oh, Sassy. As a pre-teen, I had stacks of Tiger Beat and Bop magazines with pull-out posters of Duran Duran. As a teenager, I moved on to Seventeen and fashion magazines like Vogue and Elle. On a whim, I responded to an ad offering subscriptions to what sounded like a hip Australian teen magazine. It never arrived, but one day, out of the blue, I received my first issue of Sassy. I fell in love. This book about Sassy allowed me to relive some of my Sassy history, clued me in ...more
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I read this in one sitting while at Borders. The font is HUGE, making it possible to read the entire thing in about 20 minutes.
I was disappointed in the book. As a girl who read Sassy growing up, the title of this book seemed really promising. The "love letter" is basically just a summary of what the magazine was all about and how it compared to other mags like Seventeen. I didn't really find anything that new or interesting in this book. I would have given it one star, but it was ...more
I was disappointed in the book. As a girl who read Sassy growing up, the title of this book seemed really promising. The "love letter" is basically just a summary of what the magazine was all about and how it compared to other mags like Seventeen. I didn't really find anything that new or interesting in this book. I would have given it one star, but it was ...more
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recommends it for:
I was happier with own memories of Sassy
It was physically painful to read this at first because my dad unwittingly threw away all of my Sassy magazines when I went to college and I had to face the cold hard fact that I would never have them again. They really got me through living in a terrible town and provided hope that another life was possible All the behind the scenes stuff in the book about the Sassy staff was a little depressing. Especially finding out the Christina is so over it that she moved to New Jersey and had two kids an...more
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bookshelves:
riotgrrl,
truestory
recommends it for:
aging riot grrls and Alissa Mariello
there's the old rock adage: everyone who bought the first velvet underground album started a band. that's for the 60s. for the 90s, we have: every girl who had a subscription to sassy started a zine. or, i guess, a band. yes and yes. flipping through this made me think: oh, wow, i can remember hanging out with my best friend in 8th grade and us reading the article "how to start a band" to each other while watching kennedy on alternative nation and talking about my so-called life. maybe...more
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Oh! If only I'd had this book around the time the magazine stopped publishing-it would have filled a void, accounted for the way the world could let go of a magazine that made teenage life not just beareable, but exciting. More than 10 years later, this careful and respectful history fills in the cracks, answers the "whatever happened to's?" of the magazine's writing and editing-along with the behind the scenes tales of its publishing. What it doesn't have is the wit and sass of the ma...more
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