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Diane Keaton's memoir, 'Then Again,' is elliptical and beautiful, covering her mother, motherhood, Woody Allen, Warren Beatty, Al Pacino, but not much acting.
In Then Again, Keaton juxtaposes her story with that of her mother Dorothy. She moves between her mother's journal entries to events in her own life and contemplates the connections and differences in their lives. It is a charming conceit, but it doesn't always work. Sometimes the segue is smooth, but occasionally it jars. Part of what makes Diane Keaton's memoir, Then Again, truly amazing is that she does away with the star's 'me' and replaces it with a daughter's 'I.' '-Hilton Als, The New Yorker 'This book feels like Diane Keaton. Which means it's lovable.' -Entertainment Weekly 'As warm, funny, and self-deprecating as Keaton's onscreen persona- Then Again.
