Seriously...I'm Kidding
by Ellen DeGeneres
About This Book
Ellen DeGeneres has built a career on disarming honesty wrapped in laughter, and this book is that dynamic in its purest form. Part memoir, part comedy collection, part life philosophy, it covers everything from fame and relationships to veganism and the strange rituals of being on television — all filtered through the particular lens of someone who has genuinely figured out how to be happy and wants to share that without being insufferable about it. There's a lightness here that never tips into fluff.
What makes the reading experience distinctive is DeGeneres's voice, which translates onto the page with uncanny fidelity — you can hear the timing in the sentence breaks, the shrug built into the punctuation. The book doesn't follow a conventional memoir structure; it wanders deliberately, moving from earnest reflection to pure absurdist comedy and back again, sometimes within a single paragraph. That looseness is the point. It reads less like a book written to a deadline and more like a long, warm conversation with someone who happens to be very funny and occasionally wise.