- Published: 8 November 2023
- ISBN: 9781529136890
- Imprint: Century
- Format: Hardback
- Pages: 992
- RRP: $75.00
My Name is Barbra
The Sunday Times Bestselling Autobiography and Music Book of the Year
- Published: 8 November 2023
- ISBN: 9781529136890
- Imprint: Century
- Format: Hardback
- Pages: 992
- RRP: $75.00
Fans will no doubt love this first-hand, 992-page insight into the life of one of the biggest stars of our time. It would make the perfect Christmas gift, too
Luxury London
Streisand is no less than a living legend, one of a handful of EGOT winners (Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony) and now, she’s taking us all back to where it began. Streisand’s story is truly inspirational and it’s one that you’ll want to pick up again and again
Glamour
The book is crammed with delicious details of backstage arguments, bewildered suitors and at least one incident of falling off a London bus
BBC
Chatty, candid, a 970-page victory lap past all who ever doubted, diminished or dissed her, with lingering high fives for the many supporters . . . generous dollops of chutzpah … Nobody put Barbra in the corner. There are just so many scintillating Streisands to contemplate over so many years: singer, actress, director, producer, philanthropist, activist, lover, mother, wife, friend, autobiographer. . . There’s something exuberant and glorious about Streisand’s photo dump of self-portraits and party pics. Indeed about this whole dragged-out banquet of a book. You might not have the appetite to linger for the whole thing, but you’ll find something worth a nosh
New York Times
An extraordinary life – you couldn’t make it up
The Guardian
A brilliant memoir
Hillary Clinton
A glorious doorstopper… the sheer ambition of this intricately woven memoir makes it a fascinating read. The delicate pages bring to mind a Russian novel or, perhaps more appropriately for the many who view Streisand as akin to a deity, a bible. And yet, Streisand writes relatively succinctly, with warmth and wit. Behind the sequins, beneath the wigs and through the glass of the recording studio, there’s just a woman who dreamed of being famous and make it happen, on her terms. It’s an accomplished and entrancing walk through a life well lived
Evening Standard
Exhilarating … leaves blood on the page … My Name Is Barbra is 992 pages of startling honesty and self-reflection, deadpan parenthetical asides (including a running bit about how much she loves going to the dentist), encyclopedic recall of onstage outfits, and rigorous analyses of her films
Vanity Fair
This enormous, poignant memoir from the ultimate showbusiness trouper shows that you can never have it all (even if you’re Barbra). The writing is great and the likeable formidable personality shines through . . . deeper than the average celebrity memoir
The Times
'I have been patiently waiting for Barbra Streisand’s autobiography for 54 years….My Name is Barbra is a Streisand obsessive’s dream come true. It addresses all the rumours and misrepresentations of her long and extraordinary life, from nearly missing out on A Star is Born to dating Pierre Trudeau, Omar Sharif and Marlon Brando. The wait has been worth every word!'
Richard E Grant, Sunday Times
‘Mystical, messy, bawdy and funny … My Name is Barbra confides her insecurities and a ravening hunger for fame…silent but eloquent and vociferous writing'
Peter Conrad, The Observer
In Streisand’s book, though, there’s more than just talent; we are shown graft, intelligence, a winning, rare curiosity. Even for a celebrity memoir, this is a star-studded affair: pages are dedicated to encounters with US presidents (Bill Clinton and a fondly remembered JFK), kings (Charles III and Elvis Presley), and, of course, her Hollywood contemporaries. She remembers chatting about gardens with future friend (and future king) Charles, and getting Kennedy to sign an autograph to her mother (prompting her to remark, ‘You’re a doll’ to the sitting president.... ‘Frankly, it just slipped out.’)… For diehard fans, it’s illuminating
Independent
…there are plenty of disclosures. As comes with the sort of fame Streisand enjoys, there is high-level celebrity tittle-tattle: back massages from Robert De Niro, bonhomie with the Clintons; a funny meeting with President John F Kennedy and a flirty relationship with King Charles…
I Paper
Over almost a thousand pages, the diva to end them all documents her rise to the top and the tears and joys that went with it: growing up in a one-bedroom apartment in Brooklyn; hitting it big with Funny Girl at 21; calling up Apple’s Tim Cook to demand that Siri pronounce her name right (it’s Strei-sand). What really brings this alive is Barbra Streisand’s admission of the insecurity that drives her. With a mother from hell who belittled her at every turn, no amount of fame and success could ever fill the hole in her heart
The Times
At heart this is a story so bursting with life, fury, unbelievable ambition and food (Streisand loves to eat) that you come away from it exhausted but smiling. "I was always an odd duck," writes Streisand. "And I wanted to make it on my own terms. I didn’t want to change and pretend to be someone else." She hardly needs more praise at this point, but hear hear!
The Guardian
At heart this is a story so bursting with life, fury, unbelievable ambition and food (Streisand loves to eat) that you come away from it exhausted but smiling. "I was always an odd duck," writes Streisand. "And I wanted to make it on my own terms. I didn’t want to change and pretend to be someone else." She hardly needs more praise at this point, but hear hear!
Emma Brockes, The Guardian