Thursday, April 2, 2015

Review: The Harm in Asking: My Clumsy Encounters with the Human Race by Sara Barron

Overview:

Welcome to the perverse and hilarious mind of Sara Barron. In The Harm in Asking, she boldly addresses the bizarre indignities of everyday life: from invisible pets to mobster roommates, from a hatred of mayonnaise to an unrequited love of k.d. lang, from the ruinous side effect of broccoli to the sheer delight of a male catalogue model. In a voice that is incisive and entirely her own, Barron proves herself the master of the awkward, and she achieves something wonderful and rare: a book that makes you laugh out loud. Simply put: if you read it, you will never be the same.*

*That's not true. You'll probably stay the same. But you'll have laughed a lot. And you'll have learned a fun fact about Jessica Simpson's home spray. See? You didn't even know she had a home spray! The learning has already begun.

_______________________________________________________________________

Review:

Slow start, but definitely picked up momentum once Barron started recounting her adult experiences.  Her stories from childhood seemed a bit exaggerated, and read a little too 'I find myself so interesting, everyone else must too.' I am interested to read more of her writing though.

No comments:

Post a Comment