Hide this

Results from Google Books

Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.

Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim by…
Loading...

Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim (original 2004; edition 2004)

by David Sedaris

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
10,282138259 (3.93)129
Member:hmrodgers
Title:Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim
Authors:David Sedaris
Info:Little, Brown and Company (2004), Edition: 1st, Paperback, 257 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:****
Tags:American, Biography, comedy, essays, Humor

Work details

Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim by David Sedaris (2004)

2006 (24) American (69) audio (30) audiobook (41) autobiography (125) biography (64) comedy (81) David Sedaris (49) essay (65) essays (691) family (175) fiction (173) first edition (24) funny (56) gay (69) homosexuality (27) humor (1,361) literature (26) memoir (599) non-fiction (576) NPR (22) own (54) read (170) satire (47) Sedaris (40) short stories (227) signed (37) stories (30) to-read (55) unread (43)

None.

Loading...

Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book.

English (138)  Italian (1)  All languages (139)
Showing 1-5 of 138 (next | show all)
David Sedaris is one of my most favourite writers. This book talks about his family and it is laugh out loud funny. This is the first David Sedaris book I have read and now I am going to read everything this man has ever written. ( )
  jodes101 | May 9, 2013 |
In preparation for writing this review, I read back over my review of Naked. I do this a lot: read things I've written. I joke with my spouse that my blog is my favorite blog. Everything in it is relevant to my life, and I relate to the author so well. It's a joke, but it's true.

So I guess I shouldn't be surprised that I found myself nodding in agreement as I read through my review of Naked. I thought about just copying and pasting that review here, with a few modifications, but that seemed like cheating. And I didn't feel exactly the same about Dress Your Family as I did about Naked.

Unlike with Naked, there wasn't a particular section of this book that I could point to and say, "The second half...this was the funniest part." The pieces and moments that touched me and/or made me laugh were peppered throughout the book. As usual, the things I loved about the book were also the things that left me feeling self-conscious that I loved them. The mouse swimming in the bucket, for one. And as usual when I read Sedaris, I'm left with this feeling that I've done something horribly wrong or maybe said something mortally embarrassing, I just can't seem to figure out what. Maybe I'm just inside Sedaris's head too much. He expresses a similar guilt/anxiety in his piece, "Chicken in the Henhouse," and perhaps that just kind of rubbed off on me.

One thing that really struck me about that particular essay was how it revealed a heterosexual privilege I hadn't considered before. He writes about the mixed feelings he has helping a ten-year-old boy carry coffee and cocoa up to his parents in their hotel room. In the elevator, another man chats with the boy and Sedaris is thinking about the ease with which he does this and why he, David, doesn't feel that same ease.

"The man in the elevator had not thought twice about asking Michael personal questions or about laying a hand on the back of his head," he writes. "Because he was neither a priest nor a homosexual, he hadn't felt the need to watch himself, worrying that every word or gesture might be misinterpreted."

I've been thinking a lot about privilege (racial, sexual, economic) lately, and it was interesting---and eye-opening---to me to see an example of heterosexual privilege. (For examples of what privilege looks like, see "White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack" by Peggy McIntosh).

Another thing I loved about the essays is the way Sedaris evokes strong emotion through the ridiculous. The essays that feature his brother Paul are the best examples of this. Paul---at least as Sedaris describes him; I've never met the man---is over the top in everything he does, and always seems to be unashamedly acting in completely socially unacceptable ways. But Sedaris manages to convey how deeply his brother feels, not despite Paul's foul mouth and rough edges but almost because of them. This was especially evident in the essay, "Baby Einstein," when Sedaris describes Paul in the weeks following the birth of his daughter. "This was the new, gentler Paul: same vocabulary, but the tone was sweeter and seasoned with a sense of wonder." I'm left with the sense that Paul is very dear to Sedaris---as are all of his siblings---even though they're very different from one another.

But my favorite thing about this book isn't something I can directly credit to Sedaris. I read Dress Your Family at the same time I was reading John Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress and Jonathan Safran Foer's Eating Animals, and I was delighted to find a passage in each that expressed a very similar sentiment. The one from Dress Your Family is in the essay, "Us and Them." The passages are kind of long, and I'm not even sure anyone who hasn't been staying up until 1 and 2am reading three books at once just for the fun of it would see the same connection, so I won't quote them all in this review. Maybe I'll devote a blog post about them sometime. For now, suffice it to say that I loved seeing those similarities, even if they exist only in my sleep-deprived brain.

I heard Sedaris read several of the essays in this book in Raleigh a decade ago, and I've decided that much of what's delightful about his essays is the way that Sedaris performs them. For example, when I heard him read "Six to Eight Black Men" in Raleigh, I laughed until I could hardly breathe, but it just didn't have the same effect when I read it to myself. This isn't a criticism, but rather an observation about the divide between writing and performing. It's like reading a play versus watching it on stage. Sedaris's essays just have more punch for me when he's the one delivering them. Or perhaps it's just that some of them are best performed and others are best read quietly to oneself. They're enjoyable either way, but, for me at least, they're gut-splittingly funny live and just smile-and-chuckle amusing when I read them to myself. Maybe I need to work on my reading voice. ( )
  ImperfectCJ | May 4, 2013 |
These stories (essays? memoirs?) are in the inimitable Sedaris style, and set during many different periods in the author's life. Some are funny, some are serious, most are a perversely entertaining blend of the two. Unlike one of the other collections I've read, this one did not have any real unifying thread running through it. That didn't make the contents less enjoyable, but made it weaker as a whole.

I still want to read more of Sedaris' work, and I feel like once I've consumed all of his writing, I'll be able to stitch together a pretty interesting portrait of his life. ( )
  shabacus | Apr 26, 2013 |
For me, this was the David Sedaris I fell in love with in Me Talk Pretty One Day. Dress Your Family, to me, was sadder in parts, more graphic in parts and yet even funnier in parts than Me Talk Pretty. More of The Rooster too folks, it is definitely worth the read. I was disappointed by Holidays on Ice and feared that I had read the best first and it was all going to be lame in comparison. I believe I enjoyed this more. ( )
  Ameliapei | Apr 18, 2013 |
more serious in tone but just as good as all the rest. ( )
  julierh | Apr 7, 2013 |
Showing 1-5 of 138 (next | show all)
Sedaris is a careful writer, with a no-muss, no-fuss style that rarely misfires.
 
In a couple of this book's entries, the author's attempts to write humorously about subjects that are far from humorous result in essays that can be described only as contrived and cringe-making. They feel like strained, self-conscious efforts to generate material, and they should have been excised from this volume. The rest of the book shows Mr. Sedaris in fine funny form... It is the more shaded family reminiscences..., however, that form the heart of this book and that attest to the author's evolution from comic writer to full-fledged memoirist.
 
You must log in to edit Common Knowledge data.
For more help see the Common Knowledge help page.
Series (with order)
Canonical title
Original title
Information from the Dutch Common Knowledge. Edit to localize it to the English one.
Alternative titles
Original publication date
People/Characters
Important places
Important events
Related movies
Awards and honors
Epigraph
Dedication
For Hugh

First words
When my family first moved to North Carolina, we lived in a rented house three blocks from the school where I would begin the third grade.
Quotations
Last words
Disambiguation notice
Publisher's editors
Blurbers
Publisher series

References to this work on external resources.

Wikipedia in English (1)

Book description
Haiku summary

Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0316010790, Paperback)

It just isn’t fair: most of us would be lucky to be able to express ourselves in writing half as well as David Sedaris does in his new book, Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim. But on top of his skills with the written word, the author also has substantial gifts as a performer, and he proves this on the audio version of the book. In his essay The Change in Me,Sedaris remembers that his mother was good at imitating people, and it’s clear that he takes after her. Whether he’s doing impressions of high-voiced brother Paul, or recalling times when he and his sisters tried to win good karma by speaking and acting like well-behaved, fairytale children, Sedaris’s nuanced performance hits the right note on both the opening, comedic stories, and the more poignant essays that tend to come later in the reading. In fact, for those who have already read some of the best stories in other publications including The New Yorker, the CD or cassette version of this collection is probably the best bet for furthering your appreciation of the material.

Sedaris’s career is closely linked with two things: audio (he was discovered by NPR’s Ira Glass), and the personal lives of himself and his family. In Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim, he describes fights with his boyfriend, and his sister-in-law’s difficult pregnancy. When sister Lisa complains about the stories involving the family, he writes about that, too. Sedaris's latest provides more evidence that he is a great humorist, memoirist and raconteur, and readers are lucky to have the opportunity to know him so well. Perhaps they are luckier still not to know him personally. --Leah Weathersby

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 03 Jan 2013 03:07:44 -0500)

(see all 3 descriptions)

In a collection of essays, the Rooster gets married at an uproarious wedding, an estrangement occurs over a rubber vs. plastic debate, and the author gets the upper hand during a slumber party game of strip poker.

(summary from another edition)

» see all 4 descriptions

Quick Links

Swap Ebooks Audio
137 avail.
415 wanted
4 pay7 pay

Popular covers

Rating

Average: (3.93)
0.5 1
1 22
1.5 11
2 83
2.5 30
3 571
3.5 187
4 1157
4.5 92
5 727

Audible.com

An edition of this book was published by Audible.com.

See editions

Is this you?

Become a LibraryThing Author.

 

Help/FAQs | About | Privacy/Terms | Blog | Contact | LibraryThing.com | APIs | WikiThing | Common Knowledge | Legacy Libraries | Early Reviewers | 82,569,164 books!