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Brilliant, Brilliant, Brilliant Brilliant Brilliant

Essays

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
*National Bestseller*

"This is a funny and beautiful book. What a little bastard." —Russell Brand
"Every paragraph is like doing a shot with a friend. A double." —Caitlin Moran
Joel Golby's writing for Vice and The Guardian, with its wry observation and naked self-reflection, has brought him a wide and devoted following. Now, in his first book, he presents a blistering collection of new and newly expanded essays—including the achingly funny viral hit "Things You Only Know When Both Your Parents Are Dead." In these pages, he travels to Saudi Arabia, where he acts as a perplexed bystander at a camel pageant; offers a survival guide for the modern dinner party (i.e. how to tactfully escape at the first sign of an adult board game); and gets pitted head-to-head, again and again, with an unpredictable, unpitying subspecies of Londoner: the landlord.
Through it all, he shows that no matter how cruel the misfortune, how absurd the circumstance, there's always the soft punch of a lesson tucked within. This is a book for anyone who overshares, overthinks, has ever felt lost or confused—and who wants to have a good laugh about it.
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    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2019
      A debut essay collection from a young, London-based staff writer for Vice.The volume opens with a bang: "Things You Only Know When Both Your Parents Are Dead" shows a writer who can be funny and offhandedly profound at the same time, as he discovers "there is something about death that brings out the weird little crevices in all of us." He continues, "instances of grief, I have found, are unique, two never coming in the same shape, and they can be piercing and hard-edged or they can be like passing through a deep dark treacle or they can be like a long, slow-passing cloud; it can make everything gray or everything sharp; it can hit you like a truck or it can hit you like cholesterol." Unfortunately, putting the longest and best essay at the beginning sets expectations higher than the rest can deliver. After dealing with mortality and home and grief, Golby writes about whether he's the type of man who should grow a mustache or wear a leather jacket, the challenges and symbolic significance of autofellatio, the mad obsession over winning at Monopoly, and the fantasy sex lives of the characters in the M&M commercials. "[I am] thirty now," he writes, "and this is a difficult thing to be. Internally, I fundamentally still feel like I am a lost child still slightly bewildered to have pubic hair. Externally, the world expects me to work a job and pay bills and know what politics is. And somewhere in between those spaces, there is a dissonance." In his attempts to come to terms with that dissonance, he sometimes feels like a kindred spirit to David Sedaris, but younger and more biting. He knows what material hits the deepest (family, home, death), and he occasionally recycles insights from the stronger pieces into less substantial ones. The last essay, "Running Alongside the Wagon," about his father's alcoholism and perhaps his own, is almost as good as the first.Yes, there are some flashes of brilliance; hopefully Golby will continue to grow as a writer.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      February 15, 2019
      Golby, a British staff writer for Vice, moves between dark wit and even darker emotion, often in the course of a single sentence, in his first book. Now in his thirties, and reluctantly leaving youth behind, he muses in a set of 24 mostly brief essays on subjects including sex robots, camels, leather jackets, the emotional pitfalls of playing Monopoly, and Why Rocky IV Is the Greatest Ever Rocky Film and Therefore by Extension the Greatest Film in History. An edge of anger, stated with more than a little profanity, underlies even the fluffiest essays and comes out in its full glory in a piece about the ways he would like to punish the many landlords who didn't return his security deposits and another entitled All the Fights I've Lost. The relatively slight though consistently entertaining essays that make up the majority of the book are bookended by two more substantial and touching ones, the first about the death of his parents and the last about his complicated relationship with alcohol.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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