Rating:  Summary: This one made me laugh out loud...at work! Review: I am always looking for an author that can make me laugh while sitting and reading alone. Bill Bryson did it for me! There were moments that his writing rambled a bit, but all in all, it is well worth the laughter.
Rating:  Summary: Some people just don't get it Review: This book is extremely funny. Reading some of the reviews I realise that some people just don't get it.. This is not meant to be a travel book or meant to help a would be traveller to the UK. It is about a man who decided to retrace his arrival into the UK 20 years ago and then goes for one last trip around the isle. It is funny and well worth the read.
Rating:  Summary: Hilarious in parts, disappointing in others Review: At times Bill Bryson had me laughing out loud. At other times, he had me shaking his head over his cliches. "Notes" would have been lot better with some good editing, both for length and content. In all, "Notes" reads like a good first or second draft -- there's lots of funny material on England, yet a lot of rambling as well. By two-thirds through, I was ready to set the book aside. If you're reading a range of books on England, by all means, include this one, just don't consider this as bible.
Rating:  Summary: I am an Anglophile. Review: What a fantastic read. Absolutely ripper fun to read out aloud, when you have been caught laughing in public. Bill Bryson has managed to capture the quintessance of the British in his writing. Read this book before you travel to the UK, it will warm the cockles of your heart.
Rating:  Summary: Hilarious for "the Brit abroad", a must for the American Review: This book covers every aspect of Britain and the Brits that both Americans and the British have wondered about, tried to explain and laughed at for years. If you're a Brit living in America it'll take you home and if you didn't know already, tell you what's so great and yet so amusing about your country and countrymen. If you're an American it'll tell you why that Brit you know makes you laugh or why you just can't fathom him/her.
Rating:  Summary: A Big Disappointment Review: Rarely have I been so disappointed in a well-reviewed book. Mr. Bryson has a two-year-old's fascination with all forms of excretion and a teenager's predilection for a particular four letter word. Worst of all, however, he is a traveler-by-choice who hates to travel. The inconveniences --- poor food and accommodations, long waits for conveyance, boring fellow travelers --- which the seasoned travelers I know shrug off, at least in hindsight, with humor and good grace irritate Mr. Bryson as much as the daily commute frustrates the daily commuter. One gets glimpses of an interesting isle in between the complaints but, all-in-all, one wonders not only why he bothered to do something he obviously doesn't enjoy doing but why he thought the rest of us would be interested in reading about his manifest crotchets. If you read travel books for pleasure, try A Year in Provence by Peter Mayle.
Rating:  Summary: You don't want to go THAT way... Review: How very true so many of Bryson's images are! Anyone who has seen the UK Comedian Harry Enfield will immediately recognise "you don't want to do that..." as a character alive in Bryson's book. I realised the honesty of Bryson's insight into the Britons when I found myself having the car direction conversation in a pub too! And who among us British has not had to endure wet Bank Holiday outings, much like the trek up the mountains.Recommended for "natives" and anyone who wants a hilarious insight into the British way of thinking.
Rating:  Summary: American humorist of the century. Review: Move over James Thurber and Robert Benchley, Bill Bryson has made a late move to become the funniest American writer of the century. And 'Notes From a Small Island' is his funniest to date. With one foot in the U. S. and the other in the U. K., he uses his wry wit and trenchant observation to skewer British foibles and institutions. There is a hearty chuckle, and often outright laughter in almost every paragraph. To be this funny this consistently cannot be as easy as Mr. Bryson makes it seem.
Rating:  Summary: I laughed out loud Review: Being British and living overseas it was a hilarious view of how we British really are. I encourage many of my ex-pat friends to read it and I use it in my teaching in adults education when we discuss UK and it's cultural identity as part of a travel and tourism course in NZ.
Rating:  Summary: Ourselves as other see us Review: A very brief review, this: one of the happiest and funniest books I have read in a long time. Bryson's observational humour is on a par with some of our best comedians - yet there's some serious observations in there too. A lighthearted travel through the byways of English life, habits and idiosyncrasies, taken by a traveller who is prepared to enter into the spirit of all he sees. I would recommend this to anyone who loves England, who enjoys travel, who likes to laugh, who wants to see the reason for living !
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