by David Sedaris
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| List Price: | $13.95 |
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| Lowest New Price: | $6.93 |
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Product Description With a skewed sense of wit uniquely his own, satirist and popular NPR storyteller David Sedaris presents a collection of short stories and essays, wherein home surgery and an elf-abusing Santa prevail.
Amazon.com Review A collection of stories and essays by humorist and NPR commentator David Sedaris based upon his own experiences and the hidden perversity that can be found in Anytown, U.S.A. Here are images and blasphemies that nice people don't dare look at--blatantly exposed and told with the clear, casual voice of intimate knowledge. Sedaris' humor is born of compassion and his tales range from the sharing of cheery Christmas letters featuring infanticide, to experiences of the Gay and Famous (Charlton Heston and Elizabeth Dole, for example), to the lives of siblings named Hope, Faith, Charity and Adolph and to alcoholics and chain smokers you can laugh with.
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Average Customer Review:
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
David Sedaris is too funny for color television, 2008-07-06 I swear, David Sedaris is one of the funniest human beings alive today. Whether recalling his high school days in Raleigh, North Carolina, or wandering the world from Normandy to Japan with Hugh, he always seems to be able to find the funny side of life. What is remarkable is his ability to find the humor in situations that are sad and tragic. There can a dark side to humor sometimes, a constant reminder that sometimes we laugh to keep from crying, sometimes we laugh while we are crying. I've now read everything the man has written - not a dud in the lot. I can't recommend his work highly enough. I would add one caveat. Some of his stories are rated "R" for language. Even in these lax and liberal days, I would be reluctant to pass his stories along to young children or those of a Neo-Puritan mindset.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
Mixed emotions, but worth it for several good laughs, 2008-06-24 With this being the first David Sedaris book I have read, I had high hopes. It was read after recommendations comparing him to another favorite author. While there are several laugh out loud moments - mostly in the later stages of the book - for the most part I was disappointed by the inconsistent and boring majority of what reads like the diary of a dysfunctional person.
The two best stories, stories which redeem the rest of the book and are substantial on their own, are clearly "Barrel Fever" and "SantaLand Diaries", both of which had me in stitches.
"Barrel Fever" is the story of a man with a twisted sense of humor and a caustic wit. Adolph has an inheritance from his mother, no reason to work, and a best friend with an alcohol problem. His zany observations, hilarious comments and suggestions for others, and the manner in which he can blatantly lie for self-amusement reminded me quite a bit of the Ignatius J. Reilly from A Confederacy of Dunces. Part misanthrope, part crazy man, part comedian, Adolph is someone who could provide countless hours of entertainment if he weren't so lazy and unpredictable.
In "SantaLand Diaries", Sedaris creates his most memorable piece. It's hilarious from beginning to end, with a definite insight into the madness that is a faux-North Pole at a NYC department store during Christmas season. What was even more impressive to me was the ease with which he blended the comedy with the depressing aspects of over-ambitious parents who attempt to gain social status or the perfect moment vicariously, rather than simply allowing a child to enjoy the experience. Also enjoyable is the insight into an employee who would work as an elf, or who would endure the hordes of whining children and irksome parents during peak season at a mall. How anyone could do the job without going borderline insane, or without mocking and berating customers is beyond my patience or understanding.
Aside from the above two stories, the rest of the book is average. There are far too many dull moments between the chuckles and laughs, and the author seems a bit to concerned with creating a gay memoir rather than simply compiling a worthwhile, memorable collection of stories and essays.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
Funny, but not his best, 2008-03-02 Like the other Sedaris books I've read, this one was at times laugh-out-loud funny. Especially the fictional account of the author's gay love affairs with the people most likely to take offense at being included in such a story: Mike Tyson, Charlton Heston, Bruce Springsteen, etc. The essays and stories in the middle weren't as funny, though, and overall this isn't his best book.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
I love this book, 2008-02-05 So I feel compelled to write a review. This book is absurd. It is perverse. It sometimes is uncomfortable to read. I didn't love it the first time I read it and it has grown on me like a fungus. I certainly understand why lots and lots of people don't like it but I would like to impress on those who are reading the reviews that the book is not BAD, just a little unpolished. It seems that the speaker is a chain-smoking, neurotic, self-absorbed, outcast whose mind can never slow down. And these are those 3 am rants that pop up in his brain. Any they are funny, in a really dark way.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
Very good, but not as good as Me Talk Pretty One Day, 2007-12-28 I prefer Me Talk Pretty One Day, my husband prefers this one. Both excellent books!

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