book data
3,166 ratings,
3.74
average rating, 458 reviews
(more data...)
edit
published
October 6th 2004
(first published 2003)
by Hyperion
binding
Paperback, 176 pages
isbn
0786888016
(isbn13: 9780786888016)
description
Readers expecting something zany, something crudely humorous from Steve Martin's second novel, The Pleasure of My Company, will discover much greater ...more
Sign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.
There are no discussion topics on this book yet. Be the first to start one »
friend reviews
To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.
other reviews (showing 1-20 of 3,977)
All ratings
|
5 stars (677)
|
4 stars (1297)
|
3 stars (922)
|
2 stars (229)
|
1 star (41)
|
avg 3.74
editions: all | this edition
editions: all | this edition
Read in May, 2009
I have read many of Steve Martin's novellas, as well as his previous novel, Shopgirl, and enjoyed them.
However, I think The Pleasure of My Company has to be my favourite. The pace, the characters, the humour and the quirks of the main character drew me in. It is a short enough book that it can easily be read in one sitting. But I found that I wanted to keep coming back to it, to once again see life through Daniel's eyes.
I am not keen on analysing books for the deeper meanings of li...more
However, I think The Pleasure of My Company has to be my favourite. The pace, the characters, the humour and the quirks of the main character drew me in. It is a short enough book that it can easily be read in one sitting. But I found that I wanted to keep coming back to it, to once again see life through Daniel's eyes.
I am not keen on analysing books for the deeper meanings of li...more
Like this review?
yes
(3 people liked it)
1 comment
Read in May, 2008
I have to say that after I read Shopgirl I was hesitant to give Steve Martin another try. Hesitant, but some moments of Shopgirl made me feel like I also sort of owed him.
I am so glad I did. This book is obviously less meditative, and certainly more outright sappy--but I loved almost every moment of it.
The difference? I loved and cared about the characters. Felt closer to them each time the main character reached just a little bit more out of his self imposed bubble.
...more
I am so glad I did. This book is obviously less meditative, and certainly more outright sappy--but I loved almost every moment of it.
The difference? I loved and cared about the characters. Felt closer to them each time the main character reached just a little bit more out of his self imposed bubble.
...more
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
add a comment
Read in February, 2008
recommends it for:
Sentimentalists and those prone to melancholia.
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
add a comment
Read in August, 2008
I'll do my best not to compare or contrast this with Shopgirl since, for the most part, both books are completely different animals. Even though, like with Shopgirl, at times I was either very frustrated or very surprised by what I was reading.
Daniel, the character whose head the reader is in, is slightly off from normal, to put it in a nice way. One of the biggest frustrations for me in the book, however, was that it's not really clear why this is the case; I mean, we know it has to...more
Daniel, the character whose head the reader is in, is slightly off from normal, to put it in a nice way. One of the biggest frustrations for me in the book, however, was that it's not really clear why this is the case; I mean, we know it has to...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in February, 2009
The greatest obtacles are those we impose upon ourselves. As for the deepest wounds, they tend to come from those who love us considerably less than by all rights they should. This wonderful little book eloquently expresses both of these points. It belongs to that popular category of fiction which is narrated in first person from the perspective of a character who is emotionally and/or mentally challenged, thus magnifying commonplace exploits to Mount Everest proportions. I'm looking for a s...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
4 comments
Read in December, 2007
I absolutely loved this book... even more so than Martin's first novel, Shopgirl. I'm pretty sure he's a genius.
The narrator, Daniel, has anxieties and compulsive behaviors that are completely absurd. He has many unlikeable qualities, but he is also kind-hearted, witty, and hopeful. Martin does a great job of humanizing him so that by the end, I empathized with all of his eccentricities.
I liked that the world was so tiny, rarely expanding beyond Daniel's apartment. Small...more
The narrator, Daniel, has anxieties and compulsive behaviors that are completely absurd. He has many unlikeable qualities, but he is also kind-hearted, witty, and hopeful. Martin does a great job of humanizing him so that by the end, I empathized with all of his eccentricities.
I liked that the world was so tiny, rarely expanding beyond Daniel's apartment. Small...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in February, 2006
The book jacket describes the main character as a "modern-day neurotic yearning to break free." At first, I wasn't that jazzed up reading about his various neuroses, but Daniel Pecan Cambridge grew on me. I loved Shopgirl almost instantly but I grew to love Martin's second novel as I read more of it, with my attachment to it coming to a crescendo just as I read the last page. (damn!)[return][return]While I don't join Daniel in his insistence on a constant total of wattage from indoor l...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in June, 2009
I am a huge fan of Steve Martin. His standup routines are excellent. His films are funny. I also enjoyed his autobiography, Born Standing Up. I was not impressed, however, with Martin's novella, Shopgirl. I found it to be lacking in substance, not very funny or entertaining, and unmemorable. The Pleasure of My Company has caused me to re-think Martin's ability to write fiction. The Pleasure of My Company is entertaining, funny, and heartwarming. The ending may be a bit sappy and too much of a "...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
recommends it for:
Fans of Garp
I decided to add this even though I read it ages ago because I'm currently watching Shopgirl. I have only seen snippets because CNN is more entertaining. I hated the book and I think I would like the movie even less. Some men can write women well, some can't. God knows I love Steve Martin, but Shopgirl sucked donkey balls. The Pleasure of My Company, however, is on my all-time favorites list. I adored this book and apparently I am not alone in either review. Shopgirl had an emptiness abou...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in February, 2009
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in April, 2009
Ah! I like listened to Steve Martin read his work almost as much as David Sedaris reading his stories. I enjoyed The Pleasure of My Company more than Shopgirl. Every so often there is a description or metaphor that just takes my breath.
Daniel is an isolated thirtysomething so impaired by obsessions and phobias that he can barely leave his apartment block. He can't cross curbs, so he has to take elaborate walks to the Rite Aid to pick up his prescriptions, crossing the street only at matchi...more
Daniel is an isolated thirtysomething so impaired by obsessions and phobias that he can barely leave his apartment block. He can't cross curbs, so he has to take elaborate walks to the Rite Aid to pick up his prescriptions, crossing the street only at matchi...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in February, 2009
Its size and author suggest a light, funny read, but there's a darkness to The Pleasure of My Company that pokes through unexpectedly from time to time. Daniel Pecan Cambridge suffers from many neuroses, although the depth and seriousness of his mental illness is a little suspect, as he shows a surprising ability to negotiate his way out them at times (maybe that's common?). They seem to have gotten worse with age, as he hints at earlier times when things weren't quite so constricted. Currently,...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in December, 2008
recommends it for:
Quirky persons
Although the only other writing that I've read of Martin's is his amazing play, Picasso at the Lapin Agile, I was absolutely entranced by this book. The writing style is raw yet real - it felt more like reading the character's journal than an actual novel - a technique that may not have worked in another case but fits perfectly in this setting. The main character, Daniel, is easy to empathize with, and although the book focuses on his OCD tendencies, his big quirks - through his own, rambling ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in June, 2009
After the initial thrill of this book fades,I may decide that it only merits a 4-star review, but I just finished it and the resolution was so charming I decided to give it the full five. Very early into the book one realizes that the fact that someone as famous as Steve Martin has written it is immaterial... it's not a "good effort for a celebrity," it's fantastic writing, period. The added appeal for me is based on 1) the fact that it portrays the inner life of someone with OCD with ...more
Like this review?
yes
4 comments
Read in July, 2009
In The Pleasure of My Company the main character, Daniel Pecan Cambridge, is plagued by OCD tendencies. The whole story is told from first person it means we spend all 159 pages inside the barriers of these problems. One of the characters in his life categorizes the various quirks as intolerable, tolerable and hilarious.
Better than the quirks is his life and the lives around them. He writes Daniel so well in that the people around him feel incomplete and undiscovered, because they are to ...more
Better than the quirks is his life and the lives around them. He writes Daniel so well in that the people around him feel incomplete and undiscovered, because they are to ...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in January, 2004
After reading Shopgirl, I was eager to read the next Steve Martin fiction. I picked it up as soon as it was released and was not disappointed.
Once again, Martin's language is wonderful. His descriptions of a man with OCD were fascinating and, at times, heart-wrenching. The characters seemed so real that I was lost in the book. Having known people with anxiety disorders, and knowing that Martin has struggled with anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorder, the book gave a glimpse i...more
Once again, Martin's language is wonderful. His descriptions of a man with OCD were fascinating and, at times, heart-wrenching. The characters seemed so real that I was lost in the book. Having known people with anxiety disorders, and knowing that Martin has struggled with anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorder, the book gave a glimpse i...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in April, 2009
This book is short enough that it could really be read in one sitting, but I enjoyed stretching it out over several days on my commute to work. The book is wonderfully funny as it delves into the mind of a neurotic compulsive struggling to break free from his self-imposed rules. I loved reading the way that the narrator was both aware that his neuroses were crazy, yet also struggling with how to resolve them and sometimes not able to do so.
I wouldn't recommend this book to anyone w...more
I wouldn't recommend this book to anyone w...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in January, 2009
This novella got under my skin very insidiously. I read the first half and found it funny and quirky but not particularly affecting. Daniel Pecan Cambridge, the neurotic and possibly autistic main character, is an expert at building walls between himself and the world through a series of compulsions and habits. When he is forced to break out of his isolation against his will, and later consciously makes the choice to break out further, he comes alive to the reader as he does to those individuals...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
I've actually heard this (and Shopgirl, I think) as audiobooks, read by Steve Martin, and while I'm as much a print book fan as anyone, I definitely recommend them in that format. Martin really gets across the wit and the emotion of his books, which are usually dryly funny (occasionally laugh-out-loud funny, but always dry and ironic) but also have a maudlin, human sentimentality about them. It's kind of like the movies Roxanne and L.A. Story were steps along the way to transitioning from pure c...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in January, 2009
The story of Daniel Pecan Cambridge is warm, poignant and beautifully written. The psychologist in me kept working on a diagnosis for Daniel but after a while I just let the impetus of the narrative carry me along. At times this was an extremely amusing novel - at times I found myself moved by Daniel's attempts to connect with other people and overcome his galloping tics and neuroses.
I enjoyed Shopgirl, but was really engaged by this novella. Steve Martin is a great writer - not just...more
I enjoyed Shopgirl, but was really engaged by this novella. Steve Martin is a great writer - not just...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
quotes from this book
"Anyway, seeking work is a tad difficult given the poor design of the streets with their prohibitive curbs and driveways that don't quite line up."
More quotes...








































