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Anna Kendrick - Scrappy Little Nobody

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Anna Kendrick Scrappy Little Nobody

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A collection of humorous autobiographical essays by the Academy Award-nominated actress and star of Up in the Air and Pitch Perfect.
Even before she made a name for herself on the silver screen starring in films like PitchPerfect, Up in the Air, Twilight, and Into theWoods, Anna Kendrick was unusually small, weird, and 10 percent defiant.
At the ripe age of thirteen, she had already resolved to keep the crazy inside my head where it belonged. Forever. But heres the thing about crazy: It. Wants. Out. In Scrappy Little Nobody, she invites readers inside her brain, sharing extraordinary and charmingly ordinary stories with candor and winningly wry observations.
With her razor-sharp wit, Anna recounts the absurdities shes experienced on her way to and from the heart of pop culture as only she canfrom her unusual path to the performing arts (Vanilla Ice and baggy neon pants may have played a role) to her double life as a middle-school student who also starred on Broadway to her initial dating experiments (including only liking boys who didnt like her back) to reviewing a binder full of butt doubles to her struggle to live like an adult woman instead of a perpetual man-child.
Enter Annas world and follow her rise from scrappy little nobody to somebody who dazzles on the stage, the screen, and now the pagewith an electric, singular voice, at once familiar and surprising, sharp and sweet, funny and serious (well, not that serious).

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contents To Mike watch out for the icy patch authors note I m sure - photo 2

contents To Mike watch out for the icy patch authors note I m sure - photo 3
contents

To Mike, watch out for the icy patch.

authors note I m sure Ive mixed up the timeline and contradicted myself but - photo 4

authors note

I m sure Ive mixed up the timeline and contradicted myself, but Ive tried to get it right. Ive changed some names to protect the innocentand to protect my mother from people in her book club coming at her like, Thats not how my kid remembers that day in preschool. A lot of things that are meaningful to me didnt make the cut because they just werent entertaining. For example, my childhood best friend Meg isnt in the book at all because it turns out my mom was right: those stories really are only funny to the two of us.

introduction

1. braid hair

2. arrange books by color

3. do homework on the floor

4. feng shui room

5. magazine collage

6. lie in yard with Walkman

W hen I was thirteen I started making lists. Ive always liked structure, and I thought if I broke it down into steps, I could will myself to fit in. My idea of normal came mainly from film and television, and with that as my guide, I wrote down the kinds of things a normal girl might be doing when a boy showed up unexpectedly at her house. Of course, the one time a boy showed up unexpectedly at my house, he found this list.

Jared was one of the popular kids at school. We werent close, but he was a neighbor, so he occasionally came by. This was the only time hed ever arrived unannounced. He spotted my notebook, opened it, and started reading out loud.

Oh god, thats stupid. Seriously, put that down, its nothing. I was in a full-out panic. Come on, Anna, why would you generate written evidence of your social and emotional ineptitude and leave it lying around?

As soon as he left, I ripped the pages out of my journal and burned them in the bathroom sink. The fire made the house stink of carbon for days. When my mom and dad came home I told them Id been burning incense. I doubt my parents believed me, but they could sense my desperate need to drop the issue, so they moved on. That night, I resolved to keep the crazy inside my head where it belonged. Forever. But heres the thing about crazy: It. Wants. Out.

Once Id moved out of the house at seventeen and there was less threat of unwanted guests pawing through my belongings, I attempted to keep a journal again. I managed only about a dozen entries over a period of two years, but I never did burn it.

Last year I found this journal. My handwriting as an angsty teen was appalling, yet somehow better than it is now. And the subject to which I devoted the most pages (besides my virginity) was the fear that I would failin all thingsand have to go back home to Maine with my tail between my legs.

I had thought my younger self assumed everything would work outthat I was possessed of some reckless confidence you only have in youth. Otherwise, how could I have been fool enough to try? But the journal wasnt quixotic, it was fearful. The terror was so present, yet I was doing it anyway.

Shit , I thought, I used to be tough. I used to be brave. I used to be a better version of me . Lately I cant paint my bedroom walls without asking ten people for their opinion and eventually talking myself out of it altogether.

Id moved away from everything I knew and loved at seventeen in spite of how scared I was. I wondered if I would still have it in me to do something I found so daunting. Arent you supposed to get more independent as you get older? Shouldnt I be bolder, more self-sufficient? Have I gotten comfortable? Have I stopped pushing myself the way I did when I was trying to make something of myself? Was that a fluke?

I texted my brother.

Me: I miss being a scrappy little nobody. I was much more capable.

Mike: Dude.

Mike: Youre still scrappy. You just get a lot more emails now.

Mike: P.S.

Mike: Youre still a little nobody to me.

As if I had asked the universe to send me an example of something intimidatinga test to see if I still had some nervethe opportunity arose to write a book. Sure, it will be hard, but all you need to be a writer is perseverance, a low-level alcohol dependency, and a questionable moral compass. Is that not what you need? Well, Ive got a bunch of embarrassing stories. And Ill keep the rest of that stuff in my back pocket.

Thanks to my old friend Jared, Im a pretty private person. I never let anyone, not even friends, into my bedroom or my purse. I have a small stroke anytime someone asks to use my laptop; I only use that thing to look for porn and the definitions of words I should already know. Yet Ive chosen to commit intimate details of my life and psyche to the page. So, step into my brain, kids!

I wish I could have called this Its not that serious or A tweet, but longer. So much significance is placed on something you put in a book, and I dont care much for significance. Lets agree now that were just having a conversation and I happen to talk more than I listen (true in real life as well). I tend to spew my opinions until someone interrupts me, and weirdly, my computer never gained sentience to save me from myself.

There were actually several stories that my mother specifically asked me to includemostly those rare instances in which I did something out of generosity or love or some other motivation found in emotionally normative humans. I suspect she worries Im too abrasive and wants me to provide some indication that Im not a terrible person. Alas, Ive tried to be honest, because honesty makes me feel less alone, and I hope you are entertained.

Maybe I should have learned my lesson about written evidence. Its possible that in ten years, every word in here will send me into fits of humiliated paralysis. But the crazy wants out. Lets do this.


. Okay, he didnt actually say that last part, but it would have been perfect if he did.

a few disclaimers
Im Not Kool

Jessica was the first person to mistake me for someone cool.

When I was in kindergarten, both of my parents worked full-time, so I went to an after-school program. Every day, a van picked up a few kids from my class and made stops at local schools around the city before driving us to the YMCA in downtown Portland, Maine.

I had recently discovered (thanks to an incident my mother and father just love to recount) that I did not make a good first impression. Over the summer, wed been to a family campground, and while other children met and became immediate playmates, that power evaded me. I sulked for the better part of a week and eventually asked my parents, Will you find me a friend? I dont get why thats so funny. Thats basically how I feel as an adult. Will one of you guys find me a friend?

When we picked up Jessica from her school, she marched to the very back of the vanone row behind meand tapped me on the shoulder. For a five-year-old, she was a deeply confident girl. Jessica was ready to judge her fellow passengers.

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