Very funny! | I'm a Stranger Here Myself: Notes on Returning to America After 20 Years Away | Bill Bryson
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I'm a Stranger Here Myself: Notes on Returning to America After 20 Years Away
Bill Bryson
Broadway
, 2000 - 304 pages
average customer review:
based on 225 reviews
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highly recommended
a different perspective on america...
I've read books about the USA written by people who have lived
here
their whole lives, and by people who immigrated, but Bill Bryson's perspective as an
America
n who has been gone 20
years
is truly fascinating. He points out things that I never would have thought about, like the difficulties of going to an American hardware store when you only know the British words for things. Who knew that two countries that share a common language and (for the most part) a common culture could be so different?
Bryson's writing is funny at times, and makes me angry at times, but is always thought provoking. I do think the fact that he's only lived in small-town Iowa and New Hampshire slanted his perspecive somewhat; when reading, one has to keep in mind that many of the generalizations Bryson makes about America do not apply to cities with populations over 100,000. If he had moved to Manhattan this would be a very different book indeed!
That said, as someone who was raised in the US herself, lived abroad for a time, and then returned, I really enjoyed reading Bryson's observations. Most importantly, this book made me laugh out loud, quite a bit in fact. For that reason alone, I will definitely be reading more of Bryson's books in the future!
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Me too.
Having lived outside the USA for the last 38
years
, I return as a tourist, who feels strangely at home. B. Bryson's observations are often my own. His send-up of
America
n "civilization" rings true and is wonderfully refreshing. It makes me glad to be back so I can see for
myself
! Benjamin Franklin was right when he recommended the American national emblem be the turkey.
Very funny!
This book was really fun to read, it's clever and funny. Since each chapter is was a newspaper column originally, it reads like a collection of short stories.
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Some fun, some not ...
First I have to mention that I am not a U.S. Citizen, and I did read the German version of Bill Bryson's book.
After
six
years
of living in the U.S. it's easy reading, and depending what subject you're on, it can be fun.
A lot of topics are covered by a view that I doubt can be shared by many, because the "facts" stated seem to be valid for "his little
America
n corner of the country" only.
Though he often makes jokes about himself, he at the same time manages to sound superior over the "average American".
You do tend to wonder quite often why he didn't move back to England, if most things
here
are so horribly wrong and ridiculous.
A tendency to spread political views (left) gives the a last bitter taste to this book.
It's good writing, just don't put too much thought into what's being written, or you won't enjoy it.
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A lightning-fast, fun read...but not Bryson's most creative work
Bryson originally wrote this collection of essays on the quirks of the
America
n lifestyle as a weekly column in a British publication. Each chapter is a a single week's very short musing, anecdote, or tirade, succinct, funny, and wildly divergent in subject from the previous one. It's easy to keep thinking, "just three more pages," and suddenly finish the whole thing in one sitting...which is just what I did. But it's probably better enjoyed in small morsels.
The book suffers some from the serial format -- Bryson himself attests to how hard it was for him to come up with good content under time pressure, and some of the resulting material is hackneyed. Bryson's bellyaching about lawsuits, taxes, the postal service, bureaucrats, consumerism, junk food, malls, police officers, and computer usability is nothing we haven't heard before. But the tales of his personal bumblings make even the most dull topic an entertaining read. Bryson's friendly, self-deprecating sense of humor always comes through, and consistently made me smile. While t
here
's no narrative thread, the recurring themes, like Bryson's yearnings for old-fashioned, small-town Americana, do give the book a sense of unity. And some of his observations were fresh and novel.
At any rate, if one story fails to amuse, there is always the next one, just a few pages later. Anyone who likes Bryson will get a kick out of it; in fact, it's hard to imagine anyone who wouldn't.
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