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Women's Fiction
Notes from a Small Island

Notes from a Small Island

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $10.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Funny But Flawed
Review: Bill Bryson is an excellent writer. His skills are matched by few writing today, certainly in comedy. He is an American who moved to England in the early 70's, worked as a journalist there and decided to move back to The United States after becoming a successful writer.

This book chronicles his farewell journey around Great Britain and notes his humorous observations. He does this remarkably well. His biting humor and excellent, graphic descriptive are a pleasure to read. The situations he finds himself in and the observations he makes are almost always very funny if not very accurate.

Americans, shelf your patriotism when reading this book. A lot of what the author writes is directed toward a U.K. reading audience so misrepresentations and fallacies abound. A good deal of cliche and stereotypical depiction of life and the people in the United States appears on every page a comparison is made. Once you acclimate to the stilt, you will enjoy the humor.

For the reader in the U.K., know a lot of what Bill Bryson writes about his own country is fictional. He uses typecast people and places often and sometimes departs the actual. America is not much like what he writes, thought one could find such a place or person in America.

As for his observations, some truly are scathing and unfair. Some are literally attacks, even if they to elicit a giggle or two. His pen does drip poison from time to time in the descriptive of some individuals and their appearance and activities. This will turn some readers off entirely.

This book does, surprisingly, gives a clear, concise history of politics and commerce in England that is objective. An unexpected bonus, though a wry and humourous one.

A good read, though a bit acidic at times, funny and very well written, give it a try and keep your nationalism in check, you will enjoy it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Who says Americans aren't funny?
Review: If Bill Bryson learned nothing else from his years in England, he learned how to make a wry observation. Good for him. He adds English wit to his American enthusiasm in a rare comic blend that will, as many reviewers have noted, make you laugh out loud even if you're in a staid public environment. Be warned!

This book is set apart from others in its genre because Bryson lampoons a culture for which he has genuine affection. He loves the place, clearly. He doesn't take for granted the wonderful aspects of English life that aren't present elsewhere. Yet he can poke fun with the best of them.

Possibly my favorite book.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Knackered?
Review: Being part English and having studied and lived in the US, I feel I have some common background with Bryson. I think he could have done more with this one. At times, he doesn't seem to enjoy himself in his trekking, and his sprinkling his stories with typically English terminology at times seems contrived. This was my first Bryson, I'll try more to try to figure out what the hullabaloo is all about.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This Book Will CHANGE your life!
Review: Okay this books won't change your life at all, but it may change your reading list. Have you ever read one of those books where you find yourself bursting out laughing at inappropriate moments? I had to stop reading this book in bed, because I kept waking my wife. I'll not rehash the plot, but this is an extremely funny and surprisingly poignant travelogue of Mr. Bryson's last trip around England's less-visited bits. Although I've heard otherwise from a Briton or two, I felt I could clearly sense his appreciation for England and his sadness at leaving. Funny, intelligent, and touching, this is the one that got me started on Mr. Bryson's books.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Better than I could ever have expected
Review: When my husband purchased this book for me because of my interest in England & English history, I honestly didn't think it sounded all that appealing. I could not have been more wrong.

This is only book I've ever read that has consistently made me laugh out loud. Often. In public places. On the NYC Subway. And I simply could not stop myself.

It is intelligently written and includes some poignant moments and comments in amongst all the hilarious ones. It is just wonderful! I've already ordered some of Bryson's other books in the hopes that they'll be as good.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: I was disappointed by his mean observations of people.
Review: I have heard many wonderful things about Bill Bryson's books and as a soon-to-be traveller in the 'Small Island' of the title, I was interested to see his take on the place. I really enjoyed the anecdotal narration of his adventures. Bryson is an amusing, witty and informative travel writer. His method of travelling is like mine; we enjoy getting to know a place, its idiosyncrasies, its touristy spots and the more out-of-the-way places. However, after a while, his rather nasty observations about the people he encountered really started to annoy me. I found myself wanting to abandon the book after his nasty little dig at a family he observes in a resturant and describes as eating everything that passes by their table, particularly the contents of the dessert trolley. I thought that Bryson displayed a remarkable lack of intolerance and an excess of nastiness towards people. I'm not saying that one can't have a laugh at people, but the nastiness really got to me after a while and I am afraid this has prevented me from reading any more of Bryson's books. If I wanted to witness cruel intentions towards other people I'd tune in to the news. However, don't let this cloud your decision. It has probably more to do with the mood I was in at the time; I concede that I may have been in an overly sensitive mood.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An unbearably funny book!!!
Review: Bill Bryson is simply brilliant and this may be his best work (and no, I am not his mother who just signed on to bolster sales). It is funny and touching without being sickeningly sweet. His love of Britain is evident, as is his mastery of English as a foreign language for native speakers. I simply could not put this book down once I started.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not as good as his later stuff...
Review: This book is somewhat of a disappointment after reading his later works like "A Walk in the Woods" and "I'm a Stranger Here Myself". In this work, Bryson sets out on a "walkabout" around England before moving back to the States. He tries to convey the drollness and eccentricities of England's townships, but often misses and just comes up boring. Perhaps this book was not written for an audience outside the "Small Island". I would recommend bypassing this book and heading straight for his newer releases.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A good guide at that !
Review: What can I add to all those reviews saying this book is funny, critical, up to date, intelligent: a brilliant read? Well, as I was preparing my journey through England and Scotland I used this book as a guide to learn about the British culture and habits, and it actually was very useful for that purpose too ! It's very well-documented. At that, it has very good tips about nice spots the tourist guides don't mention. And Bryson is a virtuoso when it comes to writing as well, which will make slobber everybody who loves language.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Notes from a boring old whiner
Review: Bill Bryson's inability to properly plan and research a trip may add to the hilarity of "A Walk in the Woods", but in "Notes from a Small Island" it is simply irritating.

He drifts aimlessly about the country without, it seems, any real itinerary or plan of how he is going to get anywhere. He then complains constantly when he finds places closed, ends up staying somewhere of poor quality, or gets stuck somewhere due to a lack of public transport.

Anyone who attempts to travel around any country on public transport without first researching into available buses and trains and their times, only has himself to blame when he ends up in some scrape. And Bill, did it ever occur to you that finding shops, restaurants or museums sometimes closed might be a good thing? The world is not just there for your convenience. People in rural England don't all work 70 hour weeks. Don't you think it's nice that these people might be doing things with their families, resting, or wandering aimlessly like you?

The book is a kind of several weeks in the life of a guy with far too much time and money on his hands, and you soon realize that you're simply plodding through an account of a pointless routine of catching a train, checking into a hotel, going to a restaurant. What makes him think we're remotely interested in what he has for dinner every day!

By the end of the book this routine gets really, well, boring, and apart from the odd funny paragraph, this book sucks.


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