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Rating:  Summary: Hysterically Funny Review: "Joy Shtick" is a real kick! Joy Behar has written a book that is hysterically funny about relationships, family, women, men, Italians, and free advice. I also enjoyed her sections on eating, dogs, marriage, birth control, Viagra, and doctors. I think that people who will especially appreciate this book will be feminists, writers, Italians, comedians, married people, those with a good sense of humor, and a those with high IQ. Laugh softly and carry "Joy Shtick."
Rating:  Summary: A JOY to read! Review: A long time watcher of "The View", Joy Behar has always been one of my favorites. I've been meaning to read her book since it came out in 1999, but just recently got around to it, and it was worth the wait! The book epitomizes the term 'quick read' since a large amount of it's 191 pages are devoted to personal photographs from Joy's collection, or small opinions on various topics. A large amount of the book is made up of imagined conversations with various people, or tales of her family. For the most part, the book is rather funny, prompting many laughing outbursts from this reader. I enjoyed that there was just enough history of her childhood and past, so that it was informative without dragging through every detail. Reading it, I could completely imagine Joy in her home writing these stories, pausing to laugh at the ridiculousness of a certain story or short essay. If you are a fan of Joy, or a frequent watcher of "The View", then this one is a delight to read. If not, you might be left puzzled. A real treat!!
Rating:  Summary: A wonderful book about her life!!! FUNNY! Review: I for one love Joy Behar, watch her everyday on THE VIEW. Reading her book was like having her read it to me. She writes like she speaks; funny and truthfully. Although some parts of the book dragged a bit (how much can one talk about something like a hairpiece?) I really enjoyed reading this book!!! I like the way it was set up as well: Chapters and little breaks of topics to think about, and Joy's opinion.
Rating:  Summary: Don't Bother...Couldn't Be Worse Review: I love Joy on The View with her wit and comidic jabs but this book was more than disappointing. I come from an Italian family, my parents from Italy and the only subject I could mildly relate to with any humor was the Italian funeral. I wonder what she was thinking writing this book and who ever critqued it and told her it was any good at all? She babbles on about nonsense and who give a darn about any of the subjects. Babble, babble. This book isn't even mildy funny. It stinks big time. Thank goodness it only cost me a few bucks. Stick to The View, Joy and forget about writing. Great if you can't sleep....better than any pill.
Rating:  Summary: Don't Bother...Couldn't Be Worse Review: I love Joy on The View with her wit and comidic jabs but this book was more than disappointing. I come from an Italian family, my parents from Italy and the only subject I could mildly relate to with any humor was the Italian funeral. I wonder what she was thinking writing this book and who ever critqued it and told her it was any good at all? She babbles on about nonsense and who give a darn about any of the subjects. Babble, babble. This book isn't even mildy funny. It stinks big time. Thank goodness it only cost me a few bucks. Stick to The View, Joy and forget about writing. Great if you can't sleep....better than any pill.
Rating:  Summary: How could it possibly get any more funny than this?? Review: I think it really could not. I watch Joy everyday on The View. I think she is one of the most funny people ever! Her book is just so wonderful; I have read it four times!
Rating:  Summary: Belly laughs and wry photos Review: Ms. Behar, lately of ABC's "The View," gives us some standup shtick here along with a little flavor from her life, loves, relatives, and encounters with various show biz celebs. I liked the photos of her, especially the sexy one (p. 50) with the elbow pointing out and the pouty mouth. (That's mouth with a pout, not "potty mouth," although she can do that too.) I also like the shot of her (p. 6, "Coffee break from the bell jar") that makes her look like her mother played by Carol Burnett as Mary Hartman in a out take from "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman." Best piece: at the Friar's Roast, where she quips, "Welcome to the sixteenth century. Actually, it's quite an honor to be the first female roastmaster in ninety-three years. Which is ironic, because ninety-three is the average age of most of the Friars." Best exchange: (in therapy) "Joy: I hate Long Island. Shrink: Why? It's so lovely here. Have you visited the new outlet center? Joy: I shoplifted...I mean, I shopped, there. I know it well. Shrink: A Freudian slip. Joy: No, actually just a cute top." Behar is a big city girl from Brooklyn who can conduct a lesbian hour and fawn over Harrison Ford at the same time. She manages to be both Jewish and Italian, a dumb brunette and a feminist icon. She can take apart Pat Buchanan with her bare hands while worrying about the cannoli she had with lunch. She can laugh at herself, which is what a comedian has to be able to do. This little collection of uptown wit is like a box of cherry bon-bons: you'll devour the whole thing in an hour.
Rating:  Summary: if this book were a snack it'd be a rice cake. plain. mini. Review: This book is really skimpy. I'm sorry, Joy, I do like your humor as it comes across on the tube, and I really like your style when it comes to discussing Hot Topics or whatever on The View. I even admire some things I've heard you say. I was just disappointed in the book. This sure feels to me like the obligatory publish-it-while-you're-hot-and-scoop-a-few-bucks "humor" book. It's empty. (I blame the author's agent or some other advice-giver.) It takes maybe an hour to read and at the end you think, I kept reading waiting for the good stuff and now I've fallen off the end of the book and never found the good stuff. It sorta reads like you dropped your index cards full of one-liners for standup, and they got scrambled up, and you picked 'em up and started reciting them one after the other anyway. A lot of it's half-baked, not fleshed out enough. Needs a lot more editing and time put into it. Get rid of some parts, flesh out some others. I found the biographical bits, the part about the grad student husband and the parts about therapy, worth the read. But not the rest. Joy is best at sarcasm, off-the-cuff wit, and comebacks -- stuff which requires context, and live action, and just don't work in a book like this. Maybe she could write a good novel, but this kind of collection falls flat, to me. It would be a shame for someone to read this book and have that be their only impression of Joy Behar's humor. She's much better in motion.
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