Chelsea Handler’s best-selling memoir is about to get the television adaptation treatment.

According to Deadline, Universal TV has acquired the rights to comedian Chelsea Handler’s Life Will Be The Death Of Me and plans to turn the best selling memoir into a television series.

Released via Penguin Random House on April 9, Life Will Be The Death Of Me finds Handler detailing the “funny, sad, super-honest, all true story” of her year of self-discovery.

As the official description for the book teases, joining Chelsea Handler on her year of self-discovery are “a nerdy brilliant psychiatrist, a shaman, four Chow Chows, some well-placed security cameras, various family members (living and departed), friends, assistants and lots of edibles.”

With a cast of characters like that, it’s no wonder Universal TV sees potential for the bestseller to lend itself to adaptation.

Life Will Be The Death Of Me marks the second of Handler’s memoirs to get the television adaptation treatment. Previously, her 2008 best selling collection of autobiographical essays, Are You There, Vodka? It’s Me, Chelsea scored the adaptation treatment at NBC where it ran for one season.

As for Universal TV, the network scored the rights to turn Life Will Be The Death Of Me into a TV show after what Deadline describes as a “competitive situation with multiple studios bidding.”

Though the adaptation could have landed in other hands, it seems to have found its perfect home at Universal TV— especially given that Chelsea Handler herself has a first-look deal with the studio already.

There’s currently no word on who will be spearheading the series behind the scenes. That being said, Handler herself is attached to serve as an executive producer on the project.

Currently, Chelsea Handler fans can catch the comedian back on Netflix in Hello, Privilege. It’s Me Chelsea — a documentary which premiered via the online streaming platform on September 13.