The Masters Review Blog

Jun 9

June Book Review: Fred: An Unbecoming Woman by Annie Krabbenschmidt

Published last week, Fred: An Unbecoming Woman, debut memoir from Annie Krabbenschmidt “seamlessly ties themes of coming out, accepting one’s queerness, and first loves into a neat package that is full of tongue-in-cheek humor and humility,” writes reviewer Joanna Acevedo. Don’t miss this debut, out now from Rebel Queer Dinner Party Press!

Fred: An Unbecoming Woman seamlessly ties themes of coming out, accepting one’s queerness, and first loves into a neat package that is full of tongue-in-cheek humor and humility. A debut memoir from Annie Krabbenschmidt, Fred addresses issues of love and anxiety with tenderness and pop culture references ranging from Twilight to Mean Girls, jumping from Krabbenschmidt’s own family history to their time as a college student at Duke University, and everything in between. Sharply funny, this memoir comes at just the right time to address how, as queer people, we are always coming out, and how the process of finding oneself and reinventing oneself never really ends.

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