Barrel Fever and Beyond (2 Cassettes)

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Author: David Sedaris

ISBN-10: 0641821581

ISBN-13: 9780641821585

Category: Short Story Collections (Single Author)

From the bestselling author of "Barrel Fever, Naked" and "Holiday on Ice" comes this combination of previously unpublished material and stories from the original book that turned Sedaris into a bestselling author. Here, listeners will laugh out loud as a do-it-yourself suburban dad saves money by performing home surgery, a man who is loved too much flees the heavyweight champion of the world, and a teenage suicide attempts to incite a lynch mob at her own funeral.

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From the bestselling author of "Barrel Fever, Naked" and "Holiday on Ice" comes this combination of previously unpublished material and stories from the original book that turned Sedaris into a bestselling author. Here, listeners will laugh out loud as a do-it-yourself suburban dad saves money by performing home surgery, a man who is loved too much flees the heavyweight champion of the world, and a teenage suicide attempts to incite a lynch mob at her own funeral.Book MagazineThis tape starts out unpromisingly, with "Drag," a collection of not-so-funny, not-so-original anecdotes about smoking and anti-smoking. But right after that it picks up, with "Giantess," a meditation on a "specialty" magazine for men who like women "ranging anywhere from 10 to 75 feet tall" and preferably still growing. Giantess readers "take the greatest delight in the physical description of a giantess outgrowing her clothing," the magazine's editor helpfully explains. Sedaris isn't necessarily kind; some of his characters are so pathetic or self-involved that you feel uneasy even while you're laughing. In the title story, an alcoholic super confesses to one of his tenants that he's been having blackouts; then he breaks down and sobs. "Something told me I should put my arm around him," the tenant says. "But he was my super, and he was sweaty, so I didn't." Sedaris' family stories, however, all have that hint of charity that's sometimes missing in the others, and these essays, like "You Can't Kill the Rooster" and others, provoke the kind of laughter you don't have to feel bad about later.

\ This tape starts out unpromisingly, with "Drag," a collection of not-so-funny, not-so-original anecdotes about smoking and anti-smoking. But right after that it picks up, with "Giantess," a meditation on a "specialty" magazine for men who like women "ranging anywhere from 10 to 75 feet tall" and preferably still growing. Giantess readers "take the greatest delight in the physical description of a giantess outgrowing her clothing," the magazine's editor helpfully explains. Sedaris isn't necessarily kind; some of his characters are so pathetic or self-involved that you feel uneasy even while you're laughing. In the title story, an alcoholic super confesses to one of his tenants that he's been having blackouts; then he breaks down and sobs. "Something told me I should put my arm around him," the tenant says. "But he was my super, and he was sweaty, so I didn't." \ Sedaris' family stories, however, all have that hint of charity that's sometimes missing in the others, and these essays, like "You Can't Kill the Rooster" and others, provoke the kind of laughter you don't have to feel bad about later.\ \ \ \