Memoir Book Review: Someday My Prince Will Come by Jerramy Fine

by Matilda Butler on October 28, 2009

catnav-book-raves-active-3Post #24 – Women’s Memoirs, Book Raves – Matilda Butler and Kendra Bonnett

Review by Tracy Kauffman Wood

Jerramy Fine is a born princess. She believes this at four, fourteen and still at twenty-four. In fact she spends most of her young life tracking the steps of her future prince. At six years old, she chooses a son of the Windsor family, the English royal Peter Phillips born the same year as she. Her quest becomes no less than to live happily ever after with him at Buckingham Palace. In her memoir, Someday My Prince Will Come, Jerramy Fine shares her modern-day take on the Cinderella story.


The princess fantasy is one many girls of four or five cling to, but as Jerramy grows so does her dream. She becomes an Anglophile and a fan of all royalty, pomp and circumstance. After an attempt to contact Peter at age 21, she receives a reply written instead from his mother’s private secretary. She is undaunted. She says,

“I carefully folded the letter and gently placed it back inside the royal envelope – calm as calm can be. And why shouldn’t I have been? Not only had I received two well-thought-out paragraphs instead of two formulaic lines, but they had been personally composed by my future mother-in-law’s private secretary –not some lowly assistant. Not only that, but it was clear that my future mother-in-law’s private secretary liked me. And I knew it wouldn’t be long before I had the entire royal household on my side.”

This is a girl poised for her date with destiny, bound and determined to claim her crown, or at least a posh English postal code. In this memoir of a wannabe princess, memoir writers should take note of the spunky and self-confident voice, the on-target recounted dialogue and the amusing and revealing comparisons throughout the book, between the life to which she was born (the child of hippies in a Colorado rodeo town,) and the royal life to which she aspires.

For example in her post-college romp through English high-society, Jerramy finds the English playboys to be as equally disappointing as her hometown Colorado cowboys, even though the former are Hugh Grant look-alikes. Here she recounts the conclusion of her evening with ‘Fergus’.

“I shall ring you tomorrow, Miss Fine. And I shall take you to my favorite pub in London.” We kissed again. “And then I will take you away for the weekend.” We kissed again and I closed the door.

That was the last time I saw Fergus.

In comparison, here is her description of his Colorado counterpart currently working at Wal-Mart.

“You’re goin’ da London? Wow. That’s in France, right?” Then the guy would spit a wad of chewing tobacco into the used Dr Pepper can he kept hidden under the cash register.

Throughout her quest, Jerramy’s relationship with her parents remains strong and stalwart. And even though their new age choices are at odds with her preference for old world charms, she comes to appreciate the freedom and openness they have given her to find herself.

“Now, Jerramy,” my mom continued, “when you get to college, go ahead and experiment with drugs if you feel you need to. But please- please don’t start drinking.”

It wasn’t long before my dorm room cocktail parties were legendary.

A girl’s got to rebel somehow.

Certainly Jerramy Fine convinces the reader in this fun jaunt through the American and English pastoral, that obsession can be a valuable compass along one’s journey toward wholeness.

Tracy is a professional photographer and is currently writing a memoir. You can follow her at: http://www.whocanstopadream.blogspot.com/

{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }

Karen Walker October 28, 2009 at

Just wanted you to know there’s a little something on my blog on Friday for both of you.
blessings,
karen

RKBess November 19, 2009 at

Thanks again Tracy for sharing. As always I enjoy reading your work. Will have to take a peek into this book thanks to your review. Maybe someday my Prince will come…lol.
Hope You & YourHearts are all well!
~ RozieK

Janean May 22, 2010 at

I just finished reading Jerramy Fine’s memoir and loved reading her tale of life on both sides of the pond. I admired her single mined determination to follow her dream and never give up even though there were some close calls along the way. The party at the windmill was one of my favorite scenes to read. I laughed out loud on more than one occasion. Thank you for your review that pointed me toward this ‘Fine’ book.

Matilda Butler May 22, 2010 at

Hi Janean:

Thanks for your comment. Did you know that we also interviewed Jerramy and that she posted a great blog on our website. Here’s Jerramy’s blog plus writing prompt:
http://womensmemoirs.com/memoir-writing-prompts/guest-blog-and-writing-prompt-by-jerramy-fine-it-takes-a-tough-skin-to-tell-a-truthful-story/

(You may need to do a cut and paste. If you have a problem, just type “Jerramy Fine” into our Search Box on the right column of this website.)
-Matilda

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