Member Reviews
I was drawn in to this book mainly due to the cover. It certainly portraits an interesting read. This book wasn't what I expected at all but it was a good read nevertheless.
The cover and the title drew me in. I wasn't sure what I was getting myself into when I decided to download the book. It is an interesting read. It may not be everyone's cup of tea.
I came for the title and I stayed for the commentary on librarianship, insight into the stripping part of sex work, and the advocacy and activism for both sex workers and librarians.
Cooper’s master’s degree came with a $80,000 price tag with the big possibility of stringing together part-time, benefitless librarian jobs post grad (of course no one warned of this). We follow her from part-time steipper to fund this ridiculously expensive degree to full time stripper to allow her to work an ocassional, part-time librarian job post grad to advocate and activist for both libraries and sex workers.
I cannot recommend this book enough. As someone who worked in the library industry for over nine years and is a current library student with friends and colleagues still trying to find decent, full-time gigs after getting this “necessary” and very expensive masters degree, so much of this hit home.
There are also tons of resources and further research at the end, and the last chapter sparked an interest in learning more about Surveilance Capitalism, which led me to a 500+ page book on the topic. Seriously. Read this book. It’s out now!
I wholeheartedly recommend this book to anyone considering a career in librarianship. This is probably the most accurate description of library life I've ever read. I have lived every patron interaction she describes as well as many of the interview experiences. And library education, dear heavenly days, do not get me started.
I have to assume the picture Cooper paints of life working in a strip club is every bit as honest. The insider's look at their pay structure, ridiculous hierarchy, and long hours of endless hustle was fascinating.
I thoroughly enjoyed Cooper's story, opinions, and overall writing. A captivating and eye-opening book, "I Was a Stripper Librarian" is one that points out the biases and harsh realities that individuals have to face daily. Honestly, the style was phenomenal and I could recommend it for Cooper's storytelling ability alone.
This memoir was wonderful, delightful, relatable and an absolute gem. I've read more than a handful of books by sex workers, as it's one of my favorite topics, and Cooper's memoir really stood out to me. I absolutely loved the undercurrent of the importance of privacy and the knowledge of our free rights. When I first started this book I was confused as to who libraries and strip clubs intersected, but by the end it was made clear and I felt somewhat enlightened.
A great book for book clubs or girlfriends to buddy read with each other for a new perspective.
I really liked this book! Super interesting to get to learn a little about how it was to be a stripper in the US, 15-20 years ago, was it? It was nice to actually read from an ex-stripper's point of view, a person who wasn't describing it all as an awful experience (both with being a stripper, and when talking about/with thise working as escorts).
I never felt as if Cooper ever really loved being a stripper or a librarian, but then I don't often really feel like many people love their jobs, whatever it is. It was more being a stripper while also being a librarian that was interesting, but it didn't seem all that strange to me either. It kind of made sense to me, the way Cooper described it.
I liked how this book was written. Not trying to be funny or anything. Not too much facts and numbers, just someone telling their story. What they did, and why, and how it went. Simple, and exactly how I like it.
Super silly and not something I would normally read. The title is what got my attention. This is an adult read for sure.
4 Stars ( I received an e-arc from Net Galley in exchange for an honest review)
I enjoyed this book, it was my morning read before work or if I didn’t want to get sucked into a book during breaks. I did find the librarian stuff a little bit boring and I guess was hoping for a bit more behind the scenes drama. It was interesting to see how each girl lives and reacts to the workplace around them.
One thing that I really enjoyed about this book was that I think the author was very upfront about the fact that she came into stripping from quite a priveleged background, and that it gave her many advantages that other women did not have. She also acknowledges that whilst it was a choice for her, a lot of women are forced into it which is not ok.
Very insightful
okay, to be very honest, as high as hopes I had for this one I DNFed it. I have never come across a book which talks about the lives of strippers in such an honest and open way, but though I'd like to know everything the author talks about in the book, I don't think I can read the book. It's very monotonous and full of unnecessary daily life details. However, I'll remember this book and maybe pick it up once again someday in the future if I feel intrigued but I'm not able to get into it after chapter five.
This book was ok. I struggled too get into it. I wanted to read it but, in my opinion, it did not get going.
I would like to thank the author, publisher and NetGalley for giving me this book in exchange for a fair and honest review.
The following review will be posted to the Little Literary Moments blog on October 10th. It will be available at the link provided on that day. (I also only added a rating based on the requirements of NetGalley. I do not usually rate memoirs.)
Title: I Was a Stripper Librarian
Author: Kristy Cooper
Rating: n/a (I don’t usually rate memoirs because it feels like I’m rating someone’s lived experience)
Favorite Quote: “It’s funny how shame works. I was never actually ashamed of stripping, but I was ashamed of how others might perceive me if they knew.” Cooper, Kristy. I Was a Stripper Librarian. Olivier, 2021.
Review: Thank you to the publisher, Olivier, and the NetGalley platform, for the free e-ARC I received in exchange for an honest review.
Even though I didn’t rate this book (rating memoirs just doesn’t sit right with me), I do have to say that I truly enjoyed this book. Cooper weaves a fascinating story of her time struggling through grad school and becoming a stripper with interesting insights. The narrative is also brimming with unexpected parallels - Cooper was a stripper and a fledgling librarian at a time of significant, destabilizing change in both professions, and her book does a great job showing her struggles with both.
One potential criticism I have of this book is that it doesn’t offer much insight into the experiences of BIPOC strippers and trans or non-binary strippers, although Cooper does acknowledge that these experiences are different than her own. I did appreciate that acknowledgement.
I also would have liked to see more of an exploration of her decision not to branch out into different forms of sex work. She briefly mentions that as a regret, noting that her relationship with “The Architect” was her reason for not doing so, but (and perhaps this is me being too nosy), I wanted to know more about that regret. Was it the financial aspect that she regretted not participating in? Or the type of work itself? While much of this book is pretty well developed, creating a balance between her life as a student, her life as a stripper, and her life as a librarian, I thought this aspect of her experience would have been an interesting route to explore further.
This memoir was also incredibly relatable, even for someone like me who has never engaged in sex work. When Cooper was detailing her struggles with graduate work and a lack of fulfillment that came from that level of schooling, I 100% felt that. I also struggled in my graduate studies because I was really questioning whether I was where I wanted to be (and worried that I was doing a whole lot of work if it wasn’t going to culminate in a job that I wanted). I stuck with it, and though I often am stressed at work, I do believe I made the right choice, sticking with my chosen educational and professional path. But I definitely struggled and Cooper does an impeccable job capturing that feeling on the page. (Side note - I also did not attend my graduate school graduation, but unlike Cooper, my reason had less to do with that feeling of disillusionment and significantly more to do with the global pandemic.)
Finally, the ending was another aspect of the memoir that I really appreciated. Her focus turned more towards advocacy, both in regard to her own library workers advocacy, as well as advocacy groups that are looking to protect the rights of sex workers.
About that Quote: This quote was towards the beginning of Cooper’s memoir, and it really sets the tone for the rest of it. With regard to her stripping, there were two different perspectives that were sometimes at odds and sometimes in sync - her own feelings and how she perceived the feelings of people around her. She writes in great detail about strategically choosing her location, at first to minimize the risk of running into people from her school life. And then later, when she does end up getting clients from her university, and at least one from her specific school, her attitude has changed by that point, but there is still the remnants of nervousness and this emphasis on how those individuals will perceive her.
I Was a Stripper is out now! If you’ve read it, share your thoughts below!
Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for providing me with a few copy of this book.
I was a little confused because it lists the book as fiction on the inside of the book, but is marketed as her memoir.
Kristy Cooper details her account of becoming a stripper while going through library school and subsequently searching for a job as a full time librarian. As a librarian, of course I was interested in what Kristy's experience was like. When I read that she had previously worked as a dominatrix though, I wasn't as shocked that she then tried out stripping. It was less of a mousy, quiet, shy and introverted librarian turning stripper and more of a somewhat introverted aspiring librarian who had already dabbled in the sex industry tried something new to pay off exorbitant student debt. Trust me, I know about that debt! I, myself, have some massive student loans that I will probably go to my grave with!
Much of the book was really Kristy recounting tales of her day-to-day happenings and stories about people she worked with. I can't say anything was too shocking.
If you are interested in a library career, she isn't lying towards the end of the book about the costs associated with the required degrees and lack of payoff in the end in terms of financial compensation. No one goes into librarianship to get rich. Not to mention the oversaturated job market. Also, she comments on how many libraries are getting rid of the full time jobs and making part time jobs, which in many cases is also true, and doesn't help matters.
The idea of someone working in the sex industry to pay of XYZ debt is nothing new. You just don't hear about a lot of librarians doing it or they aren't publicizing it.
I guess the most interesting parts about the strip clubs was learning how they charge dancers fees, how they have to pay the bouncer and house mom, and what various clubs in various states allow or don't allow.
Thank you to Netgalley, the publisher and the author for granting me this arc!
As soon as I seen this I knew it would be something I’d be interested in and it didn’t disappoint!
I really enjoyed this book and recommend it
Kristy Cooper's account of her dual existence as a cardigan-clad librarian and strip-club dancer explodes common stereotypes about the kinds of women who serve in both jobs. While employed at a suburban library branch, Cooper also danced at local strip clubs. As she becomes more confident in both roles, the reader learns how little each of us knows about the person working beside us. Cooper's narrative is honest and unvarnished and compels the reader to follow her journey through to the end. This is a well-written tale of an industry that suffers from a dearth of positive stories.
This book delivered exactly what I was looking for. I love the simple yet effective writing style of Kristy Cooper. The journey through the author's life in grad school, working as a librarian and stripper was truly unique. I learned a lot about life and day-to-day in both professions. I have been fascinated about stripping as a profession but never found any good media that walked me through the depths of it. I highly recommend this book to anyone in the same position.
Plus, I admire Kristy Cooper's activism to defend, preserve and grow free libraries in all communities.
I was a Stripper Librarian is a fascinating book about the author's life as a stripper when she was a graduate student studying to become a librarian. I really admire how she did what she could so survive and pay her student loans and how she currently pushes back against bureaucrats under funding libraries and canceling important library services.
This book broke a lot of stereotypes, especially ones about how lucrative sex work is. With the rise of internet porn, strippers have to offer more sexual services for less money to stay competitive. Strippers are also seen as independent contractors at many strip clubs so this book highlighted how gig economy exploitation has been going well before Uber. Her honest accounts have changed my mind about the industry. I used to think it was harmless to be a stripper but it was clear that the author and the other strippers suffered sever mental health consequences from their time in the industry.
I really liked the autobiographical parts of the book because she tells her story very well. However, she also parrots internet discourse about how sex work should be decriminalized no matter what. She freely admits that she had multiple minor breakdowns and eventually quit stripping because of a huge mental health breakdown, yet she freely advocates for the industry running unchecked and unregulated. She just talks about theory in these sections without much evidence. If she really thinks decriminalization is the answer she should have proven it with statistics and real life examples, not just proselytizing. Her portrayal of her opinions as facts are why I feel like this book is only worth 2 stars even though I liked the rest of the book.
Did not finish. Something about the writing style didn't do it for me. Maybe I could have continued, but there are so many other books to read.
The title really intrigued me but I was unable to get into this book too. I don't know why but the reading just wasn't smooth for me, so I gave up.