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Me Talk Pretty One Day

Me Talk Pretty One Day

List Price: $14.95
Your Price: $10.17
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: wonderful... read it at the gym
Review: this is a great book to read while working out. It will keep you laughing and unaware of the pain you may be in. I can't wait for David's next book!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A fun, easy read
Review: My brother recommended this book. I took it on a flight from Atlanta to Barcelona and laughed out loud the whole way. If you enjoy intelligent humor you'll get a kick out of the stories in this book. Lots of fun.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Genuinely sardonic book...
Review: which will leave your stomach feeling happy and your face muscles loose...laughing at its best!! =)

Well, what can I say about David Sedaris..hmmm...he is by far the most sardonic author I have stumbled upon!! =) I have also caught him on NPR a few times on the show "This American Life!!!" He keeps you interested at the same time laughing out loud at his carefully written stories with language detail!! =)
He discusses speech impediment,homosexuality, friends, relatives (Rooster...the funny rebel bro...=), etc... This book is all about life and its various facets that one can on occassion overlook...the little things that he describes make the most hilarious settings!!! =) Happy Reading!!! =)His book "NAKED" is on my list next... =)

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: I didn't roll on the floor laughing
Review: Well, I can't certify to some readers' comments that this book is laugh-out-loud funny. I find it humorous and poignant through out. Some essays I laughed, some I pondered, and some made me think. However, I like this book a lot, especially the tapes read by the author himself.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: LOVE IT LOVE IT LOVE IT!
Review: I laughed so hard throughout this book, by the end I was telling everyone I know "read it!" I've loaned out my copy several times and still don't have it back!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Eh...
Review: Maybe I'm too straight laced. Just didn't think all of this was "laugh out loud funny."

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: A good example of how not to write a story
Review: I heard an interview with David Sedaris' sister. She talked a lot about David and this book. It sounded great, so I picked it up that day. I anticipated a raw and witty story revealing the oddness of family life. However, what I got was a rant.

I can accept that it is not a novel, but a bunch of random thoughts. Still, I like to be compelled to at least read the next word. But, I found my self predicting the next line and trudging through the pages.

Whatever happened to character building? Who cares about these people? Lots of us have stories like these tucked away in our families (what not you?). Anyway, my point is that David Sedaris attempts ONLY to talk pretty. I can just picture him throwing words together and then sitting back with a grin saying, "Oh yeah, I'm a laugh riot."

Don't waste your precious time.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Me Talk Pretty One Day
Review: Me Talk Pretty One Day is a refreshing collection of poignant and hilarious stories. Sedaris' self-deprecating humor is as complex as it is universal. His stories revolve around the things we all love to make fun of most: family, friends and ourselves. He writes primarily about these subjects against the back-drops of North Carolina, France and New York City. Although the transition between locations is abrupt, the collection of stories is held together by Sedaris' quirky humor and wonderful story-telling.
The reader is lead through intimate stories of Sedaris' bizarre and often painful life by his equally bizarre and candid mind. It is as if you have stolen his diary and are huddled in your closet reading it, trying desperately not to laugh. We all have funny family stories; Sedaris reminds us of them with accounts of his family. But I have to think he is being modest when he claimed in an interview that his family is not as strange as you would think. It is hard for any story about any brother to compete with You Can't Kill the Rooster in which he writes about his brother, an obscenity spewing, wanna be rapper from Raleigh. However vulgar his brother Paul is, Sedaris endearingly captures the relationship between his father and brother. Paul is described as "...both my father's best ally and worst nightmare. Here was a child who, by the time he had reached the second grade, spoke much like the toothless fisherman casting their nets into Albemarle Sound" (Sedaris 61).
In Shiner Like a Diamond Sedaris writes about his sister Amy who makes her attractive features grotesque:

She is by far the most attractive member of the family, yet she spends most of her time and money disguising herself beneath prosthetic humps and appliqued skin diseases. She's got more neck braces and false teeth than she knows what to do with and her drawers and closets overflow with human hair. (Sedaris 137)

In the same story Amy wears a "fatty" suit home for Christmas to frighten her father who is obsessed with his daughter's appearance and has her face painted with bruises and scars for a magazine shoot. In the Sedaris style Amy is not just weird and entertaining but also very lovable.
These family stories make up most of the first half of the collection. Due to his eccentricity, Sedaris' father is a favorite subject. In Giant Dreams, Midget Abilities he tries desperately to have his children form a jazz quartet. This of course results is a series of disappointments when each child eventually quits their assigned instrument. This story also includes a bit about Sedaris' dream to sing jingles in the voice of Billie Holiday which can be fully appreciated only when listening to the author read the story himself (this is an excellent book to listen to on tape). Sedaris' respect for his father comes out in Genetic Engineering, through a story about his work at IBM and his children's absolute disinterest in his job. In Twelve Moments in the Life of the Artist Sedaris' father's naive humor is a welcome addition to an otherwise long-winded story. Through all the stories, his family threads its way through bittersweet memories and ridiculous situations with Sedaris' own blend of tender sarcasm.
The second half of the book is made up of stories primarily about Sedaris' experiences in France. There is virtually no transition between the stories about his childhood in North Carolina and these later stories about learning French and living in Paris with his boyfriend. However, the quality of the stories makes up for this abrupt leap of time and place. After reading other stories in this book and stories in Barrel Fever and hearing pieces on National Public Radio, it is clear that Sedaris is an excellent observer of culture. He is in fine form in Me Talk Pretty One Day.
In several stories he writes about the challenge of learning French. Sedaris' observations of both French culture and language are outrageously funny and touching. In the stories Me Talk Pretty One Day and Jesus Shaves he describes his French class taught by a teacher whose "temperament was not based on a series of good and bad days, but, rather good and bad moments" (Sedaris 170). In See You Again Yesterday he writes an overview of his first six trips to France with his boyfriend Hugh. Reading it makes me marvel at the unending patience Hugh must have. As the stories develop so does Sedaris' grasp of the language; by Smart Guy Sedaris is taking an IQ test in French.
In many of these stories Sedaris uses his experience in France to reflect on American culture. I Pledge Allegiance to the Bag is a dissociated view of America that most Americans fail to see. But at the same time, as in all these stories, Sedaris forces us to laugh at ourselves. In Picka Pocketoni Sedaris listens as an American couple assumes he is French (and therefore can't understand a word of English) and berates him for smelling bad and being a pick pocket. Sedaris creates a snapshot of these quintessential American tourists. I can see them with their fanny packs and cameras and Sedaris quietly hunched in the corner, waiting to write it all down.
Though some of the stories are too long, namely Twelve Moments in the Life of the Artist and The Late Show, Sedaris repeatedly redeems himself. He is weird and can laugh at himself. He is sweet and sarcastic in the same breath. He is a talented story-teller. Sedaris says the things we think but tells them better than we would ever hope. Above all, he is hilarious.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wow!
Review: I bought this book in a frantic moment. As a big reader, I was faced with an entire night of basketball on TV with nothing to read. I had to leave the room because my husband couldn't hear the game over my laughter. I moved all the way to the bedroom and shut the door. He could still hear me laughing! I have honestly NEVER laughed out loud at a book. I couldn't even re-read favorite essays out loud because I was laughing so hard I had tears in my eyes. Mr. Sedaris is adept at showing us his family and life, with all of it's oddities and making us laugh and think at the same time. I have since read all of his other books and purchased some on audio tape, but nothing will ever make me laugh as hard as the Christians trying to explain Easter in French to the Muslim girl.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: master cynic
Review: humorous, disrespectful, politically incorrect, joyously cynical, and insightful into the psychopathologies of everyday existence.

In other words, my kind of book! Highly recommended for a raucous good time.


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