book data
1,595 ratings,
3.40
average rating, 122 reviews
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published
May 18th 2006
by No Exit Press
(first published 2005)
details
Paperback, 256 pages
isbn
1842431714
(isbn13: 9781842431719)
description
Known for his meaty seriocomic novels–expansive works that are simultaneously lowbrow and highbrow–Tom Robbins has also published over the years a num…more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 2,389)
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avg 3.40
editions: all | this edition
editions: all | this edition
Read in February, 2010
Tom Robbins is one of my favorite writers. And I always tend to gravitate towards him when I am feeling a bit lost or stuck in a rut. Whenever I need a jolt to my psyche, or a boost to my emotional immune system. This collection of essays, short stories, poetry/lyrics and other journalistic ephemera came to me at just such a time. And I am thankful for it.
While not as "meaty" as any of his novels, this collection was a welcome respite. Some if the selections are definit...more
While not as "meaty" as any of his novels, this collection was a welcome respite. Some if the selections are definit...more
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Read in June, 2009
I got this book as a gift for my half birthday -- in fact, I got HALF of this book for my half birthday -- and I read it with the warm feelings I had towards it's giver.
That was probably a good thing. I like Tom Robbins. I like the way he chews language and spits it back out in a form that is almost unrecognizable and yet more familiar than the individual words were when they went in.
(An example I'm thinking of is how he talks about "the lobby of the tornado."...more
That was probably a good thing. I like Tom Robbins. I like the way he chews language and spits it back out in a form that is almost unrecognizable and yet more familiar than the individual words were when they went in.
(An example I'm thinking of is how he talks about "the lobby of the tornado."...more
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Read in March, 2009
One of the reasons I adore Tom Robbins' books is that I can never tell where he is going with something, but I'm sure it will intertwine in a way that makes me feel like I should have known all along. He is pulling the wool over my eyes, and I'm blissfully blind and savoring every paragraph until the conclusion.
This book doesn't take that journey as it's a collection of his short writings. The travel writing is short and doesn't invoke the images of the places like it does with imag...more
This book doesn't take that journey as it's a collection of his short writings. The travel writing is short and doesn't invoke the images of the places like it does with imag...more
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Read in March, 2009
I love Tom Robbins. Boy howdy, do I ever. And there were some fun and interesting pieces in here, like In Defiance of Gravity:Writing, Wisdom, & The Fabulous Club Gemini which argues for the benefits of comedy and enjoyment, and What is Art and If We Know What Art Is, What Is Politics? which he begins, "The most useful thing about art is its uselessness."
But I had to give it three stars because it also has some pretty painful poetry... I think Robbins just works better for ...more
But I had to give it three stars because it also has some pretty painful poetry... I think Robbins just works better for ...more
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Read in September, 2008
there weren't a lot of good commuting reads to choose from at my brooklyn public library branch. so i picked this little gem up. it was a compilation of tom robbins short writings -- all those little stories, reviews, critiques and even poems that were thrown into magazines and journals over the years. it was good choice. it's surprising how insightful he is in this collection. you get a very good understanding just who robbins is. his meditations on everything from swampy vacations, the 60...more
Read in July, 2007
recommends it for:
visionaries, mayonnaise lovers
i'm not quite done with this book, but i have certainly enjoyed it all the way through. the book is divided into five parts: 'Travel Writings', 'Tributes', 'Stories, Poems and Lyrics', 'Musings and Critiques',and 'Response'.
thus far 'Tributes' has been my favorite section. i love seeing the figures that make one of my favorite authors tick. some of them are pleasantly surprising, like Diane Keaton and Jennifer Jason Leigh. some of them just really make sense, like Joseph Campbell a...more
thus far 'Tributes' has been my favorite section. i love seeing the figures that make one of my favorite authors tick. some of them are pleasantly surprising, like Diane Keaton and Jennifer Jason Leigh. some of them just really make sense, like Joseph Campbell a...more
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Read in July, 2008
This is a smorgasbord of poems, stories, essays and criticism. I enjoyed some of it, skipped a bit and suffered through a few pieces as well. I'll always love Tom Robbins because he blew open my mind and my world when I first read him in high school ... but I have grown a little less tolerant of his over-the-top gallery of linguistic tricks as my tastes have change (not matured, necessarily, just changed). Sometimes I feel like I'm drowning in a stew of adjectives and abstractions while reading ...more
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What a synopsis of Robbins' literary genius. The man titillates language out of the hum-drum verbiage of suburban American life and launches it tango onto the hot tin roof of the reader's imagination. We are introduced to Robbins through his fiction. This paperback enlightens the tie and suit side of Robbins' literary pyrotechnics. However, beneath the suited genres of travel narrative, music/film review, poetry, short stories, or interview response, Robbins' prose wears pink flamingo board ...more
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Read in September, 2009
I picked this up randomly, having never read any Tom Robbins before, and enjoyed it. The quality of the short writings varies (not a big fan of his poetry and his art criticism is in a different language) but several are quite good and the rest were fun or funny. I'll probably be picking up some of his fiction soon.
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I think the reason I like Tom Robbins is because he has a very different writing style, and is unexpectedly hilarious at times. Also - how can you NOT love a book whose title is Wild Ducks Flying Backwards, or Half Asleep in Frog Pajamas? Different but interesting.
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Read in January, 2007
A Huge, let me repeat Huge fan of Tom Robbins, I was extatic to get my hands on this when it came out, just to be hugely disappointed. I love his deeply intricate detailed tales...but I cant stand short stories. no match to his full novels.
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Read in January, 2008
recommends it for:
you, if you like mayonnaise
Tom Robbins certainly is a colourful cat. A cat of colour and wit, a cat of verbosity and a lovely soul to boot.
This book probably is just a little random to get all the points and remember them, since each is often an intense little journey into a worthy subject, but to recall each and move on to the next colourful story can be a shame, as the last's subtlety is forgotten... At least that's what I found.
I love Robbins, I love his rambling but crystal focused novels, and...more
This book probably is just a little random to get all the points and remember them, since each is often an intense little journey into a worthy subject, but to recall each and move on to the next colourful story can be a shame, as the last's subtlety is forgotten... At least that's what I found.
I love Robbins, I love his rambling but crystal focused novels, and...more
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Read in October, 2009
Tom Robbins style, without the compelling characters, hippy philosophy, or juicy sex scenes. So, not exactly my cup of tea. It did give me a connection between him and reality though, as most of the topics in this collection of essays were written for magazines.
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Tom Robbins isn't known to be a short story writer, so I wasn't expecting too much from this book. Appropriately, since there are only a handful of short stories and the rest are reviews, forwards, and magazine and newspaper articles. Some were totally lost on me (written about people and situations I am unfamiliar with) but some were very lyrical, thoughtful pieces that broadened my understanding or appreciation for their subjects (like the piece on The Doors, and the one about his camping tr...more
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Chakra brought me this book to read when I was laid up in the hospital with a broken arm. I could only read so much at the time but I really enjoyed it. Tom Robbins does a damn fine job of writing.
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This collection of essays, short fiction, poetry, art criticism, and a screenplay is worth it just for the 1967 (or '68?) review of the first time The Doors played in Seattle (he absolutely captures the essence [what I can imagine the essence would be] of the band making mad, angry, musical love to that audience) and 'Till Lunch Do Us Part,' his response to the question, "If you were on death row, what would you request for your last meal?" I use the latter essay for a great "how-...more
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my third time reading this book of essays--if you haven't read any tom robbins, start with this one! it will ease you into 'even cowgirls get the blues'...
Read in August, 2009
tom robbins is fucking amazing. he can shove all of that lengthy and absurdly detailed madness into a wonderful and engaging short story. genius.
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Read in February, 2008
Beginning to peruse this one. I loved "Fierce Invalids" with a passion...up until he began to wrap it with a bow, and then loved it again because he rips the bow to shreads at the end.
This however is a collection of non-fiction mostly. It was a shocker when I started to read it, however his writing is still as sarcastic, witty and elbowing-you-in-the-side-funny that I am intreguied, not put off by the change.
Same voice, new material.
Looking back on this review......more
This however is a collection of non-fiction mostly. It was a shocker when I started to read it, however his writing is still as sarcastic, witty and elbowing-you-in-the-side-funny that I am intreguied, not put off by the change.
Same voice, new material.
Looking back on this review......more
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Tom Robbins needs to clone himself. I would've paid the same price for just the "Responses" section. Hilarious and feel-goody.
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