
Mirth of a Nation
Audio Companion, Fellow Traveler and Friend for Life
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

This humor anthology is a cocktail party of essayists' humor (including Garry Trudeau, Dave Barry, Bruce McCall, and many others), read and performed by an interesting mixture of guests. The more talkative ones--Tony Roberts and Susie Essman--hold your attention and rarely dribble their bon mots on your new shoes. Everyone reading seems to be having a good time, even when the writing occasionally veers into more mundane territory--but there's one at every party. Even after the tastier tidbits have been shared, you'll find the broad range of this verbal buffet a good "audio companion and fellow traveler," as advertised. D.J.B. 2003 Audie Award Finalist (c) AudioFile 2003, Portland, Maine

November 1, 2002
The audio medium is probably the best way to absorb this collection of comic pieces written by American humorists. The vignettes, which range from the hokey to the truly jocular, receive the royal treatment by seasoned actors Roberts and Essman. Other performers, notably Plimpton and Rakoff, add spunk and pizzazz to what might otherwise be dry, vaguely spirited essays. Rakoff gives a cynical and hilarious performance of his own "All Happy Families...," about a neurotic dude whose New Year's resolution is to explore "more natural avenues to happiness" (e.g., by eating four packages a day of Robert's American Gourmet Gingko Biloba Rings). Essman's reading of Carina Chocano's "The Self-Help Hot Line" is appropriately saccharine, while Roberts's delivery of Bruce McCall's "Who Wants to Keep His Job" is matter-of-fact. All the pieces were anthologized in either Mirth of a Nation and More Mirth of a Nation, and some originally appeared in the New York Times magazine, Tropic magazine, Salon.com, McSweeney's Internet Tendency, the New Yorker and other publications. While some tracks are bound to be replayed for friends more than others, this is overall a valuable and well-performed collection.
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