Feig is best known as the creator of the hilarious and lamentably short-lived television show Freaks and Geeks, which was set in the 1980s and chronicled the lives of high-school outsiders. Both those who miss the show and those who've never heard of it will enjoy Feig's comical collection of essays about his own youth. . . . Whether he's triumphant or humiliated, Feig is a droll storyteller. --Booklist on Kick Me I love Paul Feig's sense of humor--in a platonic way. This book is hilarious. I recommend it to people like me. And to people who don't like me. --Garry Shandling on Kick Me It bodes well that the dedication to this book is laugh-out-loud funny, and indeed, Feig (Kick Me) does not disappoint in this comedic tale of his early sex life, or lack thereof . . . . The account of his journey to sexual manhood is witty and entertaining and one to which any former sex-addled adolescent (male or female) will relate. --Publishers Weekly on Superstud It is certain to release a rush of memories in all who have finally come to grips with the awkwardness of having grown up. Primarily for the humor section of public libraries, this work might also provide some insight for psychologists specializing in adolescence. --Library Journal on Kick Me It's shocking that one person could have so many humiliating experiences and even more shocking that he chose to remember them. Kick Me is like an unofficial prequel to Freaks and Geeks. If anything, Paul Feig's real stories are actually more harrowing than what his fictional characters went through. --Ira Glass, host of This American Life, on Kick Me