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Fraud: Essays by David Rakoff
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Fraud: Essays

by David Rakoff

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70196,373 (3.65)6
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Broadway (2002), Edition: Reprint, Paperback

Member:birdguy
Collections:Your libraryRating:****
Tags:StorageUSA
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I like these more the second time. Verbose, yes, but oh, so true. ( )
  SirRoger | Aug 5, 2008 |
This collection of essays are the offering of a compatriot of the laudable “this American life” crew. After hearing him read on the show a few weeks ago I felt it likely worth my while to grab his book if he was anywhere near as thoughtful and entertaining as his fellows david Sedaris & Sarah vowell; lucky me, he is.

Unabashedly intellectual and fiercely opinionated, this author has a facility of language somewhat rare in the ranks of the modern humorist. Not since twain and wilde has such a fierce wit been paired with such keen nuance of the written communique. Highly educated and ruthlessly self deprecating rakoff leads us into a series of fascinating excursions to places no less far flung than Tokyo, reykjavik, & new jersey,

narrating with his distinctly wicked but undeniably compelling perspective. While not more than occasionally laugh out loud funny, this book felt somehow less trivial than most of the humor reading I do. Peppered with words and phrases I had to look up (she admits to her chagrin) I walked away from this one feeling edified; not just because I felt safer armed with my dictionary, but because of the amusing yet nonetheless consistently thought provoking observations of this transparently erudite author. Well worth it, recommended. ( )
1 vote arouse77 | Jun 23, 2008 |
Funny, witty with deep under currents and wider range then David Sedaris ( )
  ablueidol | Jan 2, 2008 |
Pretty darn cute. ( )
  front_porch | Nov 14, 2007 |
Hilarious essays on the annoyances of life that give substance to concerns I usually feel petty about (like hating cats and wondering if I use the word "dude" too much). Highly recommended to Daivd Sedaris fans.
  ElDoradoHills | Aug 23, 2007 |
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You're maudlin and full of self-pity. You're magnificent. --Addison DeWitt
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for Simon Sutcliffe and Del Gordon and My Family
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David Rakoff

Icelandic Elf School

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 038550084X, Hardcover)

Let's get this out of the way: David Rakoff is not David Sedaris. When you hear him being incredibly smart and funny on This American Life, you invariably think, "Oh, it's David Sedaris." But if you listen closely, you can tell the difference. Rakoff, while no less witty or nasal, is a little more disappointed. In his first collection--a series of pieces for public radio and for various magazines--he positively revels in his world-weariness. Whether he's investigating the Loch Ness monster, attending a comedy festival in Aspen, Colorado, visiting a New Age retreat hosted by Steven Seagal, or just, you know, playing Freud in a department-store window at Christmastime, Rakoff tends to get comically depleted. Watching the comic Dan Castellaneta, for example, he writes, "It's a bad sign when I start counting the unused props on stage. Only two wigs, one stool, an easel, and a dropcloth to go. I begin to pray to an unfeeling God to please make Castellaneta multitask." In a piece where he attempts to climb a mountain (well... a very short hill), Rakoff immediately nips any Sierra Club fantasies in the bud: "I do not go outdoors. Not more than I have to. As far as I'm concerned, the whole point of living in New York City is indoors. You want greenery? Order the spinach." But in the end, what makes him such a terrific writer is that he's not only onto everyone else, he's onto himself. No wonder his visit to a kibbutz becomes the occasion for some supremely self-conscious amusement: "I know I sound like the Central Casting New Yorker I've turned myself into with single-minded determination when I say this, but the main problem with working in the fields is that the sun is just always shining." --Claire Dederer

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:09 -0400)

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