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56+ Works 8,347 Members 115 Reviews 16 Favorited

About the Author

Known for her realistic, humorous books, Erma Harris Bombeck wrote about ordinary, everyday events and problems. As a dedicated mother, she used her experiences raising children as a rich and vital source of her material. Her sense of humor and her appreciation for life made her successful in show more print, radio, and TV. Bombeck was born in 1927. In 1949, she began her career as a reporter for the Journal Herald in Dayton, Ohio. From 1975 to 1986, Bombeck appeared as a biweekly commentator on the Good Morning America television show. Bombeck's book titles give an indication of her style of humor: A Marriage Made in Heaven, or Too Tired for an Affair; I Lost Everything in the Postnatal Depression; and If Life is a Bowl of Cherries, What Am I Doing in the Pits? Her book, When You Look Like Your Passport Photo, It's Time To Go Home was a bestseller. Bombeck was repeatedly named one of the 25 Most Influential Women in America by the World Almanac. Her books were frequently on nonfiction bestseller lists. Bombeck died after surgery in April 1996. She and her husband Bill Bombeck had been married for 47 years and had three children. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: Courtesy of Erma Bombeck Writer's Workshop, University of Dayton

Works by Erma Bombeck

The Grass Is Always Greener Over the Septic Tank (1972) 1,062 copies, 18 reviews
Family - The Ties that Bind...And Gag! (1987) 774 copies, 4 reviews
Motherhood: The Second Oldest Profession (1983) 687 copies, 10 reviews
Aunt Erma's Cope Book (1979) 602 copies, 9 reviews
At Wit's End (1967) 449 copies, 9 reviews
Just Wait Till You Have Children of Your Own! (1971) 389 copies, 7 reviews
When God Created Mothers (2005) 18 copies
Erma Bombeck No. 2 (1981) 3 copies
On the Job Training 3 copies, 1 review
Svátost manželství (2005) 2 copies
Etre mère (1992) 1 copy

Associated Works

More Stories for the Heart: The Second Collection (1997) — Contributor — 653 copies, 1 review
The Best Baby Name Book in the Whole Wide World (1984) — Introduction, some editions — 296 copies, 1 review
Russell Baker's Book of American Humor (1993) — Contributor — 226 copies
The Penguin Book of Women's Humour (1996) — Contributor — 124 copies
The Signet Book of American Essays (2006) — Contributor — 40 copies
Creme de la Femme: The Best of Contemporary Women's Humor (1997) — Contributor — 40 copies, 2 reviews
How to Use the Power of the Printed Word (1985) — Author — 34 copies, 1 review
The Woman's Guide to Confident Home Repair (1977) — Introduction — 14 copies
Reader's Digest Today's Best Nonfiction 27 1994 (1994) — Author — 6 copies

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adult (18) American (18) anecdotes (22) autobiography (18) biography (46) Bombeck (24) children (32) comedy (76) ebook (38) Erma Bombeck (72) essays (170) family (160) fiction (173) funny (42) hardcover (53) humor (1,623) humorous (19) Kindle (23) marriage (43) memoir (92) motherhood (60) non-fiction (437) own (33) paperback (39) parenting (73) read (93) to-read (173) travel (25) unread (30) women (35)

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What Are You Reading February 21 2015? in What Are You Reading Now? (February 2015)

Reviews

129 reviews
Erma Bombeck has a unique way of looking at life and of writing about it. She shines through the pages as being a person who can take the sickness with the health and tries her damndest to see the funny in something that could fill you with despair. While many of the stories are laugh-out-loud funny they also induced a wry smile occasionally and when she spoke about her miscarriages I nearly cried. What she doesn't mention sometimes is almost as important as what she does mention.

I would show more recommend it. show less
Erma Bombneck is quite funny, she is sarcastic as all get out and while you know she exagerates for effect you can see that it's based on reality. She describes life as she lived it in the suburbs in the 1940s and 1950s and while instagram/pinterest perfection wasn't a thing there was an expectancy of perfect white picket fence living that people tried to conform with that was just as draining.

Entertaining as always and an interesting look at how things haven't really changed, just the show more technology. show less
I'm glad I didn't read this before I was in my 50s. It is absolutely relevant to my age and place in life. A lambasting of the many "self improvement" books out there which promise to fix everything you didn't know was wrong with you in just 365 pages. I chuckled as I read each chapter, and even though the points are greatly exaggerated for humor value, there is a grain of truth, in fact, I might say a 10 lb. bag of flour's worth of truth in each chapter. The world is out to make us feel show more inadequate to life. It's up to us to push back and say, enough. I am good enough. show less
½
I’m not sure how old I was when I stumbled across one of Erma Bombeck’s books, The Grass Is Always Greener over the Septic Tank, in a second hand bookstore though I think I was maybe in my mid teens. I hadn’t really read anything by a humourist before and I wasn’t expecting to find much in a book written by an old (from my perspective), American housewife amusing but I did. In fact I think it was probably the first book that actually made me laugh out loud. After that I kept an eye show more out for anything else by Erma, at that stage (in the late 1980′s) she had published 8 books but they were difficult to find in Australia. Over the years I have managed to collect five of her books, and read 2 others (courtesy the library).
The Erma Bombeck Collection includes two of the books I already own – The Grass Is Always Greener over the Septic Tank, and If Life Is a Bowl of Cherries, What Am I Doing in the Pits? and a third I hadn’t managed to get a hold of Motherhood: The Second Oldest Profession.

It’s delightful to discover just how timeless Erma Bombeck’s sense of humour is. Despite the generation gap and the seismic changes in society, her domestic commentary is still as relevant as it was 40 years ago.
My children regularly ambush me with the need for a costume/cake/working model of a rocket ship the night before it is needed, my husband can never find anything on a shelf in the pantry or fridge without my help and I haven’t seen the floor in my teenage daughter’s room for years. No matter if you are the mother of toddlers or teenagers, and regardless of whether you are a stay at home mum or work full time, it is easy to relate to Erma’s light-hearted diatribes.

Hilarious, heartwarming and wise, this is a wonderful collection of three of Erma Bombeck’s best, and a thoroughly entertaining read.
show less

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Works
56
Also by
11
Members
8,347
Popularity
#2,891
Rating
3.8
Reviews
115
ISBNs
260
Languages
8
Favorited
16

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