Keepinnit Reels is a sharp, affectionate collection of humor essays that excavates the rituals, mishaps, and mythologies of American childhood and suburban life. With a voice that blends cultural anthropology, stand-up timing, and warm-edged nostalgia, Michael Pollick transforms everyday memories into miniature epics-equal parts heartfelt and hilariously over-dramatic.
Across these essays, readers will encounter the familiar landmarks of growing up: school cafeterias and church basements, petting-zoo diplomacy and driver's-ed disasters, snack-aisle revelations and family traditions that made no sense but somehow mattered. Each piece takes a small, ordinary moment and reframes it as folklore-evidence that the chaos of youth was never random, but part of a larger, accidental mythology we all helped create.
Pollick's storytelling is vivid, cinematic, and deeply relatable. Whether he's chronicling the physics of a doomed thermos, decoding the unspoken rules of coffeehouse culture, or revisiting the improvised stagecraft of childhood church plays, he writes with a blend of wit, tenderness, and observational precision that invites readers to laugh, wince, and remember.
Keepinnit Reels is for anyone who grew up in the glow of fluorescent lights, survived on processed snacks, or carries a soft spot for the strange, unpolished moments that shaped them. It's a celebration of the absurdity and sincerity of being young-and a reminder that the stories we keep are often the ones that keep us.