Nora Ephron is a genre unto herself. Renowned for her scathing and intelligent wit, her insightful and comedic analyzes of the female experience, and her ability to detect the absurdities of modern life, she is one of America's most beloved writers and filmmakers, and her work, one of the most influential. In this book, the last one she published, the New York author makes an amusing review of her past, her greatest failures and joys, and humorously laments her daily vicissitudes. Ephron talks to us about what it means to choose your passion as a way of life; of their sentimental ruptures and of the loves that mark us; of her first job managing mail for Newsweek magazine; of her troubling relationship with her inbox; or those questions that all women ask themselves when they reach a certain age but rarely dare to confess. From any anecdote, the author is capable of drawing some brilliant observations in which the reader is reflected at all times. I Remember Nothing is one of her best books and the perfect synthesis of her literature.