3.5 stars
Well... I love Miranda Hart. Then again, I already did.
Is It Just Me? is essentially a written version of her character in the eponymous TV series Miranda, which is in itself partly inspired by real life events.
The whole time I was reading it, I could almost hear Miranda’s cheerful voice in my head, narrating her own book to me, down to the change in tone and inflection, so I can only imagine listening to the audiobook would’ve made the experience an even better one.
However, I did have a few qualms about the book.
For example, while her back and forth with the 18-year-old version of herself was mostly amusing, at times it missed the mark for me, and got a little repetitive, as well as the constant stream of mishaps and faux pas, which now and then became a bit tiring to get through.
The thing is, while watching the series, you expect everything to go wrong for this character, as an adorable and accident-prone Miranda keeps finding herself in one absolutely ridiculous and mortifying situation after another, and proceeds to handle all of them with absolutely zero grace. Since she’s a fictional character, written that way, it’s fairly easy to entertain the idea of such a clumsy and unlucky person. And so it is endearing, and you can’t help but groan and laugh at the visual gags as you cover your face and drown in a puddle of second-hand embarrassment.
But this is not the series, and this is not Miranda as that fictional character.
I mean, am I to believe Miranda has had to endure such incessant humiliation in her lifetime?
If so, just... wow. I can only be inspired by anyone who is this unabashedly perseverant.
But I’ll go ahead and assume that only about a third of it all is real. Miranda is a comedian after all, and otherwise I simply cannot... “bear with”.
Despite all of this, and the fact that I didn’t completely fall in love with the book, I am glad it exists. Not only because it made me laugh out loud several times, as Miranda generally does, or because I was pleasantly surprised to find a lot of truly sweet and heartfelt moments throughout the book, but mainly because we need more from someone who is so brazenly devoted to not taking life seriously.