Tabitha Carvan has written for publications such as The New
York Post, Australian Geographic, Overland, Offbeat Home, The
Outline, AsiaLIFE, and MamaMia, focusing on issues of identity,
family, and pop culture. This Is Not a Book About Benedict
Cumberbatch is her first book.
One of Good Housekeeping’s 20 New Books to Add to Your Summer 2022
Reading List
One of PureWow’s 20 Best Beach Reads of Summer 2022
One of 425 Magazine’s Best Books of 2022
One of MPR News’s Best Books of 2022
“Part memoir, part self-help, this one will empower you to
rediscover your own obsessions. And yes, Google image search the
Sherlock actor, too." –Good Housekeeping
“The title alone inspires a smile, but the book itself is
hilarious, and wise…[Carvan’s] story is really about the joy that
comes with rediscovering and indulging youthful passions and
pleasures.” –AARP
“Winningly effervescent…[The book] seems written in the blush of
first love, an aria of joyous discovery at the shedding of an
obsolete inhibition…To read This Is Not a Book About Benedict
Cumberbatch is to follow Carvan on a path to overcoming her shame
and reveling in the sheer frivolity of her love for the Sherlock
star alongside the women [who] share it with her. Once she does,
she proclaims, ‘it felt so good—you would not believe how
good!—that I didn’t mind if it made me the biggest weirdo in the
world.’ She almost makes you feel as good as that when she gets
there.” —Slate
“The real subject of [this] wonderfully fresh [take] on fandom is
the unabashed, self-aware embrace of joy…[Carvan] considers the way
we treat women who feel deeply: ‘When a lot of women love anything,
that’s all we need to know about it.’ Subversively important
stuff.” –Chicago Tribune
“To describe the book merely as ‘funny’ is a disservice to the
author because [the] reader starts to appreciate that what Carvan
is attempting to reconcile is a woman’s place and growth in the
world. . . I hope I am always a reader who can appreciate a book
like this one.” –Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star
“A surprise midlife obsession with British actor Benedict
Cumberbatch provides the occasion for musings on passion, aging,
and identity in this spirited debut…Carvan’s self-aware approach
wrings the absurdity out of her story to hilarious effect while
touching on the realities of motherhood and fandom: “It’s not just
about what we love, but how that love figures in our lives, and how
it makes us feel.” The result is a weird-in-the-best-way account of
self-discovery that brims with humor and insight.” –Publishers
Weekly, starred review
“Quoting Brené Brown, Mary Oliver, and Gail Sheehy and referencing
her own lifelong, complicated relationship with fandom, Carvan's
loving but unapologetic manifesto is one to carry proudly on your
next sojourn into the melee of backstage autograph
seekers.” –Booklist, starred review
“Caravan is a talented writer who is able to weave together words
in a way that lifts you up, makes you embrace who you are, and
grabs a hold of your soul, reminding you that life is worth living
and not existing through. She reminds you that joy is not a dirty
word, it’s something that we should take in as easily as the air we
breathe…Introspective and poignant…Written with such humor,
strength, and delight.” –Fangirlish
“[A] clever and charming debut…Carvan’s candid revelations about
the ways in which passion, bias, identity and motherhood intersect
are hard-won and insightful, not to mention humorous…She makes an
excellent case for taking time to figure out what you like and
embracing the delight it brings—no shame allowed…[A] funny,
thought-provoking memoir.” –BookPage, starred review
“This year’s most hilarious self-help book.” –Daily Mail
“This quasi memoir, quasi personal growth book by Tabitha
Carvan is hysterical, charming and features—as the title implies—a
great deal about actor Benedict Cumberbatch. But it also explores
why we should all just love what we love—especially women, who find
that their particular obsessions are often ridiculed by culture at
large.” —MPR News
“[A] funny, honest memoir about shame and loving the things we
love…[Carvan] explores her thoughts on finding a new passion, why
we feel embarrassed about loving some things, and how we need to
break out of our shame and grab on to the things we enjoy for dear
life.” –BookRiot
“Remember that feeling you had as a kid, when you loved things
wholeheartedly, boldly, and loudly? If you feel a sense that there
is something missing from your life, some gap between who you are
on the inside and who you are on the outside, then this is the book
for you.” –Eve Rodsky, author of Find Your Unicorn Space and Fair
Play
"This really isn't a book about Benedict Cumberbatch. It's about
so, so much more: Losing yourself and finding yourself, oppression
and emancipation; sadness and joy. Tabitha Carvan's memoir will
make you think and make you cackle. It's the most delightful
book I've read in a long time." –Melinda Wenner Moyer, author
of How to Raise Kids Who Aren't Assholes
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