Грязная работа
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Грязная работа

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4.07 of 5 stars 4.07  ·  rating details  ·  23,853 ratings  ·  2,800 reviews
Чарли Ашер - самый обычный парень. Чуток несчастный, слегка невротичный, малость ипохондрик. Он типичный бета-самец - нерешительный, осторожный и склонный к размышлениям, а не к действиям. Чарли даже в кошмарном сне не могли привидеться, что он станет вассалом Смерти. Но именно эта беда с ним и произошла. И его доселе тихая и уютная жизнь обычного ипохондрика превращается ...more
Hardcover, 544 pages
Published June 1st 2009 by Phantom Press (first published March 21st 2006)
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Kelanth, in tenebris lux tua
Libro divertente che miscela e mescola vari generi per un cocktail davvero dissetante e frizzante per evadere qualche ora dalla realtà quotidiana che ci circonda, o forse sarebbe meglio dire per guardarla con occhi diversi. Chissà mai cosa vediamo spuntare dal prossimo tombino?
Ci troviamo a leggere di un maschio beta (Moore utilizza spesso la contrapposizione tra maschi beta e alfa: del tipo le donne passerebbero ore a parlare con un beta, ma alla fine si scoperebbero un alfa), di nome Char...more
Todd
It seems to me that Moore wants to be a cross between Stephen King and Dave Barry, and for the first half of this book, he nearly succeeds. But once he reaches the midway point, he falls into the trap of trying to squeeze in every one-liner he can -- the result is that all of his characters end up speaking in the same, snarky voice, and no one really seems to be anything other than a generic, stock character.

This tends to be a consistent problem in all of his books I've read to da...more
Chris
What is that, you might ask? Well, in Moore's words:

"When Alpha Males set out to conquer neighboring tribes, to count coups and take heads, Beta Males could see in advance that in the event of victory, the influx of female slaves was going to leave a surplus of mateless women cast out for younger trophy models, with nothing to do but salt down the heads and file the uncounted coups, and some would find solace in the arms of any Beta Male smart enough to survive.... The world is ...more
ttrygve
Go read this book. Now. It's hilarious, you will not regret it. That is all the review it requires. =)
Krista of the Many Sparkles and and Shimmies
While I enjoyed the story line and found myself laughing out loud at some of the dialogue, this wasn't a book that kept me racing to the end. I'm happy I read it and would recommend it to others who are looking for a truly unique (and weird) read. I plan to give Moore another try in the near future...not sure which book yet.
Shan
Let me preface this by saying I LOVE Christopher Moore. L-O-V-E. If he wrote a grocery list, I'd read it rapturously. This book (along with Lamb, which I will also review shortly) is one of my absolute favorites of his. "A Dirty Job" may be his funniest, wittiest book yet (although "Lamb" is pretty close....). This book has the average Beta male, Charlie Asher, his dead wife, their newborn daughter, little old Asian and Russian babysitters, a jailbait goth girl store cler...more
Michelle Balmeo
I can't remember the last time I read a raucously funny book. You know, the kind that sort of shocks and surprises you, that makes you laugh aloud in a conspicuous way. Christopher Moore's A Dirty Job did exactly that and was just what the mortician ordered when it came to relieving stress and just enjoying a freaking book.

This story of a smart and cynical paranoid "beta-male" raising his somewhat strange daughter in the Bay Area takes the reader right to the edge of seriou...more
JG (The Introverted Reader)
Charlie Asher is your average Beta Male. He owns a second-hand shop in San Francisco and rents out the apartments in the rest of the building to some kooky tenants. He has somehow managed to win the heart of beautiful Rachel and she has just given birth to their daughter Sophie when the book begins. Charlie can't believe his luck, and, with typical Beta Male imagination, believes that Sophie has eleven toes or a tail or something--good things just don't happen for Beta Males. After Sophie's ...more
Jim
It relies too much on a type of humor that won't tickle everyone. The first section, 100 pages or so were almost exclusively this, without much plot. While initially funny, I almost got tired enough of it to put it down, but there was just enough hope to keep me going. I'm glad I did. After that, the plot developed nicely & it was a fun read. It's a neat world that Moore created with a fun mythology about Death & he takes an insider look at San Francisco that will tickle any native, I think...more
Erin
This book is quickly moving up the list to become one of my favorite Christopher Moore titles. Just below Lamb, I think. I heard that Moore wrote this book while dealing with a death in the family and you can definitely tell. All of Christopher Moore's books are funny, but there are only a couple that are poignant as well.
Robin
Robin rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: anyone
Recommended to Robin by: TNBBC
Shelves: fun-read
What a fun read. I was not familar with Christopher Moore and was introduced to him by people here on GoodReads. What a joy! This book was highly entertaining. I'll write a full fledge review when I'm not so swamped but just wanted to write a "quicky" saying how much I enjoyed this.
Kua
Questo libro mi ha spiazzato. Primo perchè pensavo di ridere di più e anche se ho sogghignato spesso, non è stato tanto spesso quanto avrei voluto. E secondo perchè ci sono molte parti che denotano una profonda ricerca sulla morte, gli innumerevoli rimandi alla dott.sa Kübler-Ross e al suo saggio La morte e il morire o al Bardo Thodol (il Libro dei Morti tibetano), hanno fatto sì che questo libro io lo abbia letto un pò come quelle frecciatine che ci si fanno tra amici, della serie "te lo d...more
Kristen
What are the guys that aren’t Alpha Males? Why they are Beta Males of course! Charlie Asher is the quintessential Beta Male… amazed and terrified by women, passive aggressive, and perpetually panicking over his hyperactive imagination. Poor Charlie loses his wife during childbirth and is left a single dad to raise Sophie. Unfortunately for Charlie, he also acquired a new profession as his wife passed away. Charlie has become death, no not the death with the big D, more like the Santa’s Elve...more
Mark
My first encounter with Christopher Moore but not my last. Pretty consistently funny throughout, and I often find comedy wears thin after a while. In this gothic comedy (if that's a subgenre), a doofus--Moore's label of choice is "beta male"--a nice guy who's normally passive, nerdy, kind of hypochondriacal, not a little naive--accidentally becomes Death, or, rather, one among many agents or "death merchants" whose job it is to collect the "soul vessels" of the ne...more
Sara
If you have not read this book, you must put down whatever you're doing, sign off this computer, and find a copy. Apart from giving the precise sociological explanation of a beta male (to which women are not initially attracted, but to whom they really will enjoy being married), this book explains in a comforting, eloquent, and humorous way what happens to your soul when you die. Toss in the spawn of Satan as a baby, a couple of indestructible Hellhounds, a handful of Harpies, and the end of the...more
Elizabeth
This book was great, very funny, a little strange... actually it had a higher than average "oddness factor" to it, but it was still very good. If you liked You Suck I think you would like this. I'm not sure if the author was trying to have a "twist ending" or if it was just irony that the reader could see the ending coming LONG before the characters. I thought the final battle was great, but final page and epilouge? They did not hold up to the rest of the book. For an a...more
Wayne
Never do I laugh out loud more often during a novel than when I am reading Christopher Moore. Nobody does "dark humor" better. In A Dirty Job Charlie Asher has spent his entire life as a beta male, always living in the shadow of the alpha male. Despite his hypochondria, constant worrying, and general nerdiness Charlie has managed to wed a beautiful woman who loves him. Unfortunately she dies of a rare complication following childbirth and Charlie is left raising his daughter alone.
...more
Geordie
Geordie rated it 2 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: people who liked 40 yr old virgin and dick jokes
SUMMARY: funny dialogue. great premise. filled with plot leaks, story holes, and characters who start off strong and end weak.

The book started off with great premise: for some unknown reason a guy assumes the office/duties of DEATH. It was reminiscent of "On a Pale Horse" by Piers Anthony. It's hilarious for the first 2 sections. It reads like an action screenplay. I pictured Paul Rudd (40 year old virgin) as the main character, Asher. All was well and then the book tanke...more
Natalie
If you should ever wake up and find that you have become the main character in a Christopher Moore novel, do whatever it takes to get yourself out of there quickly. So far the protagonists of his stories have been beset by Zombie Santas, swallowed by whales, exiled to cannibal-infested islands in the tropics, and more recently, discovered they are Merchants of Death. So begins Christopher Moore's "A Dirty Job," where life is full of promise for Charlie Asher, a well meaning if overly c...more
Marty
Marty rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: avant-garde humorists
More to come later ... but for now:

If you're familiar with Christopher Moore's work - particularly some of his earlier novels - then you'll recognize the style of this story immediately. His penchant for having subtle cross-overs continues here as some characters from "Blood-sucking Fiends" make an appearance. But that's not the good part. The good part is Moore's irreverent humor as he tackles the battle between good and evil in his trademark off-kilter way.

...more
Sherrie
Sherrie rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: people who love the fantastic!
A favorite author and a really fun book! Exactly what I expect from Mr. Moore! (The same guy who wrote about Jesus and his best friend Biff in “Lamb” so you can pretty much tell who we’re dealing with here.) Charlie’s wife, Rachel, dies giving birth to their daughter, Sophie. A shadowy figure is seen stealing the wife’s favorite CD. The shadowy figure is actually a Death Merchant coming to collect Rachel’s soul…which is inhabiting the CD. Charlie is tapped to become the next Death Merchan...more
Colleen Venable
I'm always hesistant when someone tells me that an author is "a modern day Vonnegut" because Vonnegut is the modern day Vonnegut. Give the man a little more time in the ground before you try to replace him. *geesh!* I probably would have never picked this up, it being a) a book for adult people and b) a book with the author's name larger on the cover than the title of the book (a big pet peeve for me that is only surpased by terrifyingly big "James Patterson" style pictures o...more
Marvin
When I first read this book, I knew absolutely nothing about it and that is the way I recommend you read it.I can't think of a book that threw so much at the reader and managed to succeed at every twist and turn. It is a hilarious read which is saying a lot since the main theme is about death. And that's all I'm going to say except read it. You will love it
Kassandra
Kassandra rated it 2 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: Adam Sandler fans, men
Recommended to Kassandra by: My husband
This is my third Christopher Moore book. The first was Lamb, which I recommend to anyone who's heard of a guy named Jesus. The second I can't even remember, only that I couldn't finish and it was about vampires or something. This one is about as good as the second I read.

A Dirty Job starts with a fun premise - a sad sap becomes a collector and placer of souls called a Death Merchant. Then it deteriorates as evil forces come after him, giving him hand jobs in alleys and speaking to hi...more
Ardesia
- È uno sporco lavoro, ma qualcuno lo deve pur fare e poi non tutto il male vien per nuocere.
- Chi vivrà, vedrà, ma è risaputo che a tutto c'è rimedio fuorché alla morte.
- A volte però l'apparenza inganna e ride bene chi ride ultimo.
- Bè, tentar non nuoce, ma occhio che vanga piatta è poco adatta e se non è zuppa è pan bagnato.
- Forse si stava meglio quando si stava peggio, però da cosa nasce cosa e chi non risica non rosica.

Ma bando alle ciance.

Un...more
Jessica
So this book is split into three different sections... The first one was okay, I really like the second one, and I didn't like the third one at all... so, in the mathematical scene in my head, that equals two stars. By the end, I just didn't care. There were very funny parts, I'll give it that, but not enough humor to keep me interested.
lynne naranek
Since I have yet to find Lamb on the local library shelf, I picked up "A Dirty Job" instead. So, a funny and irreverent take on Death? I enjoyed Piers Anthony's take on it in On A Pale Horse [the first book of his Incarnations of Immortality series], and I've read others in the same vein.

So, this one? It's not too bad, actually, if it wasn't for the squirrel people. Without that aspect of the story, and I'm sure Mr Moore would have been able to come up with something mu...more
Al
I liked this book. Fast read and fun writing style. I laughed out loud a few times while reading; one of those books that you wished someone was reading it at the same time you were so you could discuss.

Story of a regular guy who finds that he has a new position, one unrequested, of being Death. Without much guidence he is forced to learn about the position and to cope with other dark forces.

Who hasn't wished they could point at someone and say "kitty"?
Rebecca
Rebecca rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: those who find Maxim heavy reading
Recommended to Rebecca by: No one, thank god. It would reflect poorly on my taste.
I wanted to read Moore's book Lamb, but it was checked out so I picked up A Dirty Job instead. It maybe was a bad sample of his work, but as luck would have it, it's what I read, wanting to stop in several places, but hoping it would redeem itself. No such luck. The book was hard to follow timewise-- basically you don't know if action is taking place over a week or 6 years. The characters are flat and annoying, and the dialogue is the same. The book is also misogynistic and racist at points, whi...more
Judith
A Dirty Job: a Novel by Christopher Moore relates the amazingly funny story of Charlie Asher, Beta Male secondhand shopkeeper and undercover “Death Merchant,” and his struggle to save the world from the forces of darkness. Blending subtle wit with just enough cheap laughs to keep you from thinking too hard about the depth of Charlie's character, the culture of his community, or the insights he shares, Moore offers brilliant satire in laugh-a-minute packaging. More fun than a barrel of squirrel p...more
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Urban Fantasy: A Dirty Job--October Group Read--SPOILERS 7 32 Oct 20, 2011 09:00am  
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Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the GoodReads database with this name. See this thread for more information.

Christopher Moore (born 1957 in Toledo, Ohio) is an American writer of absurdist fiction. He grew up in Mansfield, OH, and attended Ohio State University and Brooks Institute of Photography in Santa Barbara, CA.

Moore's novels typically involve confli...more
More about Christopher Moore...
Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal You Suck (A Love Story, #2) Bloodsucking Fiends (A Love Story, #1) Fluke: Or, I Know Why the Winged Whale Sings The Stupidest Angel: A Heartwarming Tale of Christmas Terror

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“Don't be ridiculous, Charlie, people love the parents who beat their kids in department stores. It's the ones who just let their kids wreak havoc that everybody hates.” 290 people liked it
“Charlie Asher: I accidently shagged a monk last night.
Minty Fresh: Sometimes, in times of crisis, that shit cannot be avoided.”
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