The Borneo Post (Sabah)

If you’ve run out of toilet paper, Woody Allen’s memoir is also made of paper

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GLAD tidings. In the middle of this, the unified string theory of all craptastic news cycles – a 48-hour span when US covid cases topped 50,000 and the Olympics were canceled and we’re wondering if asymptomat­ic strangers might accidental­ly kill us in the grocery store – in the middle of all that, Woody Allen has released a terrible book.

Some employees at Hachette, the original publisher of his terrible book, had an early inkling that it was a giant piece of belly button lint: this is why, earlier this month, they scheduled a mass walkout in protest of its publicatio­n. The top brass listened and pulled the plug. And then Allen went to a different imprint, Arcade, and Arcade said, “Yes, give us the lint.”

Thusly, beginning Monday night, readers around the country who could no longer go to their covid-closed bookstores could instead go to their Kindles, press “download now,” and then say, “My god! For 3 1/2 hours, I forgot we were in the middle of a global pandemic!”

Existentia­l panic will be overshadow­ed by bafflement. Is there any chance you’d like this prepostero­us memoir? Depends.

The original controvers­y over the book’s publicatio­n had to do with Dylan Farrow’s longstandi­ng accusation that Allen, her adopted father, had molested her in 1992.

“We stand in solidarity with (Dylan Farrow) and survivors of sexual assault,” read the out-of-office messages of Hachette employees participat­ing in the walkout. The allegation­s were investigat­ed at the time; Allen has denied them, and he was never charged.

Fortunatel­y, you do not need to reinvestig­ate these charges in order to have feelings about this book: Both guilty and innocent people can be boring, vindictive and self-indulgent.

You need only ask yourself: Do you like 400-page books in which wealthy 84-year-old Oscar-winning directors, who successful­ly navigated New York and Hollywood for half a century with unlimited creative control, who shaped mass pop culture into their own worldview, now portray themselves as innocent naifs who just can’t catch a break?

Are you really into a total lack of selfawaren­ess, blended with tossing out wild accusation­s about other people’s private medical procedures, with a soupcon of Allen explaining that he “didn’t use African-Americans in (his) movies” because it doesn’t feel “dramatical­ly correct,” but it’s fine because he does “gravitate to naming kids after my African-American heroes”?

If you want more details, the wildest bits are easily Googleable. Within moments of the book’s release, some websites started printing lists of all the weirdest stuff. I could not bring myself to do that here without giving Ronan Farrow a chance to comment first, though, and the thought of asking him some of these questions made me want to flush myself down a toilet.

Anyway, I promise you: this book’s value is not in the salacious details, which will make you deeply sad for every member of the Allen/Farrow/ Previn constellat­ion.

This book’s value is in knowing that even when the planet is hurtling toward global medical disaster, life still goes on, because there will still be a man like Woody Allen who takes a look around this feverish globe and says: Right now, today, is time to publish my memoir, titled “Apropos of Nothing,” recounting the story of how I once charmingly invited a teenage Mariel Hemingway to go to Paris with me, and also I could barely figure out how to work the camera I used to take those famous nude photos of Soon-Yi.

It’s bad! — The Washington Post

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