It Chooses You

by Miranda July

Paperback, 2012

Status

Checked out

Publication

McSweeney's (2012), Edition: First Trade Paper Edition, Paperback, 208 pages

Description

L.A. screenwriter, performance artist, and author, takes to the streets to meet the folks advertising their cheap wares in the local "PennySaver" classifieds shopper. Their stories are humorous, intriguing, and sometimes moving, and ultimately, surprisingly helpful in shaping the film she is trying to complete.

User reviews

LibraryThing member devdev365
The persona that Miranda July inhabits reveals a rare combination of openness and self-investigation. She appears not inclined to hide anything from the world, nor from the lens of her own critique, out of a sense of honesty and duty. Her method is intuitive yet also radically open to
Show More
self-criticism. One admires in her the ability to take the decisions her life is founded on, and that comprise her art, back to first principles. In that respect, her work is profoundly ethical.
Show Less
LibraryThing member Diabolical_DrZ
Mildly interesting character studies overshadowed by not that interesting self absorption of the writer.
LibraryThing member myturn
I just finished reading this book and wanted to write about it, while the feelings are still fresh. I sat and read the entire book in one afternoon. I could not stop reading it.
I stumbled upon this book and had ordered it from Amazon. It was one of those... if you like this... you'll love this type
Show More
of marketing tactics that Amazon does. But - I took the bait and bought the book after having read the synopsis.... which sounds intriguing and "right up my alley" (as my mother would say).
The author, Miranda July, had started reading the PennySaver, which is a classified ad type flyer, that allows people to post their items for free, as long as the item was being sold for less than $100. As the author notes in her book, sort of like Craigslist (or Kijii) for those that haven't entered into the world of the internet yet. So Miranda starts looking and reading the PennySaver cover to cover and becomes curious about who the people are behind the ads in the PennySaver. She wanted to know who the person was that was selling the "Large leather Jacket, $10?" and what that person was all about.
So Miranda called up people from the PennySaver and asked to meet with them and offered to pay them $50 to allow her to interview them. Most turned her down but some more adventurous souls or perhaps those desperate enough to earn the $50, accepted her proposal.
Miranda brought with her to each interview, two friends, Brigitte Sire who was the photographer and Alfred her assistant, who was there to "protect them from rape". Brigitte the photographer, captured the other half of the story... in pictures. Candid type pictures of the person being interviewed, as well as their living environment, their calendars, and sometimes taking photos of the interviewees photographs, photo albums or scrapbooks.
The people she meets are fascinating. The author isn't afraid to ask questions... but does so in a way that is gentle, compassionate and understanding toward each individual's different set of circumstances. I feel like her personality, lent a great deal of weight towards each of these interviewees trusting her, opening up to her and revealing their inner selves. I found that with certain interviewees - I was left wanting more. I wanted to know even more about the people behind the items being sold in the PennySaver, just like the author did... view yet unseen.
There is a lot more to the book, than just the interviews and photographs. The author also asks the reader questions about how the internet is providing an alternate world, so to speak, in which people do not discover others who are different from them, in the same way anymore. She notes the affect that the internet has had on our generations new view of what 'reality' is... what our 'world' now has become for us. One we created.
The book, felt like a journey and at the end of it, I found my eyes watering at the beauty of people. The beauty of our differences, the beauty of our life's path but also the beauty of the end of life's path and how both meaningful and meaningless it all can be.
Highly, highly recommend this book.
Show Less
LibraryThing member RandyMetcalfe
After many drafts of her screenplay for her film, The Future, Miranda July found herself veering toward a period of sustained procrastination. Her procrastination took a peculiar form. She decided to contact individuals selling items in the PennySaver. If the seller agreed, July would bring along a
Show More
photographer and her assistant and conduct an interview. A modest gratuity was offered. The purpose of these interviews and photographs was not clear at the outset. In some way, July knew she was on some sort of quest. But for what? Or for whom? It Chooses You consists of partial transcripts of these interviews, with accompanying photographs, interlaced with July’s account of the ongoing development of her script for her film.

There is a tone to this kind of life writing, which, if you get it right, seems to justify almost any amount of uncomfortable honesty. July hits that tone almost from the start. It’s the kind of thing that turns what might be construed as invasive ogling of lives that are strange or sad or denuded of hope, or worse, into self-reflection. Because as much as it looks like July has put these people on display, it is really herself who is put on display. That’s not always comfortable and it’s not always salutary.

Nevertheless, something positive emerges over the course of the PennySaver interviews. Some of that becomes incorporated into the next draft of July’s screenplay. But most of it is embodied in her last interviewee, Joe Putterlik. Joe is so fresh and real (he is 81 at the time) that July is moved to write him into her script and to have him play himself. The interaction between Joe and July is affecting and its documentation here is a fitting memorial to Joe, who died before this book was published or July’s film was released. An interesting read, modestly recommended.
Show Less
LibraryThing member adzebill
Endearingly quirky record of a procrastination exercise undertaken by the author instead of writing her stalled screenplay, and how the project (interviewing classified advertisers in the PennySaver, a local free buy/sell paper) took on a life of its own, and ended up folding itself into, and
Show More
solving the problems of, her movie. Photos and random interviews make for a bitsy read, but there are moments of hilarity and odd insight.
Show Less
LibraryThing member vplprl
Sometimes procrastination is a good thing. While trying to complete a screenplay, Miranda July distracted herself with the local Pennysaver. She became fascinated by the ads and wondered who these people were. July set up interviews with a number of the individuals and soon, their lives began to
Show More
inform the script she was writing. One individual even had a small part in the completed film – The Future. This is a must read for fans of Bill Richardson and Veda Hille’s A Craigslist Cantata.
Show Less
LibraryThing member davisfamily
The ending was fantastic, had to slog through a lot of "oh poor sad me" to get there....

Language

Physical description

208 p.; 8.33 inches

ISBN

1938073010 / 9781938073014
Page: 0.1253 seconds