'Hilarious, wise and heart breaking. Like an all-night over-share with your best friend.' --SARA PASCOE
'Rachel is one of my favourite comedians. This book is warm, wise and hilarious. It is written in her comic voice - a voice she mainly has used to tell me off, so I am thrilled to see it deployed in this way.' --NISH KUMAR
'The most joyful bursts of wisdom from a truly funny soul. I adore this book.' --CARIAD LLOYD
'Hilarious, original and wise. This is essential reading.' --ELLIE TAYLOR
'Rachel is one of the wisest, funniest people I know. Funny, sad, beautiful and ridiculous, Advice from Strangers has it all.' --PIPPA EVANS
'A hilarious, fiery, reassuring hug of a book. Full of laughter, compassion and feminist wisdom.' --FRAN BUSHE
'An essential, hilarious handbook for life.' --ATHENA KUGBLENU
COMEDIAN RACHEL PARRIS WAS ASKED TO GIVE AN INSPIRING GRADUATION SPEECH. WHO DID SHE ASK FOR ADVICE? TOTAL STRANGERS...
Over the course of a year award-winning comedian Rachel Parris asked members of her live audience for advice. Here she takes those random bits of wisdom - such as 'Be Kind' or 'Never Pass Up the Opportunity for a Wee' - and explores them in ways that are funny and serious, hilarious and heart-breaking. This uplifting feminist manifesto of a book outlines the essentials of living in the modern world; dealing with everything from Tampons to Tories and from #hashtags to Staying Hydrated.
This is the book I didn't know I needed. Funny, thoughtful, comforting and rage inducing (at the world, not the book) all at once. I kept thinking I'd find a favourite chapter or piece advice, but in truth they are all what i needed to hear. Even when an idea didn't align with what I believe, it was genuine and thought provoking. Couldn't ask for more.
Loved listening to this audiobook. A collection of essays - social commentary, comedy, poetry, history, lists, science, music… An intelligent, funny and moving book.
Having attended one of the launch events at Cheltenham lit I was expecting something entertaining and comical. In reality it’s quite dull and I felt there was a lot of “poetic license” in interpreting the advice. Not for me
Rachel Parris is a comedian, actor and a brilliant musician. She was asked to go back and give a speech at the school she attended, but she felt unable to offer advice. The book stems from the fact that Rachel asked audience members from her tour to offer up advice in the form of a single sentence. This book had me laughing out loud in parts, but it is also quite touching and sad in places. I really enjoyed this book, as much as I enjoyed Rachel Parris' comedy and her contributions to the The Mash Report (and The Late Mash). Which is a lot!
I loved this so much I physically highlighted an actual book and for those who are going to kick off - it’s my book and I’ll scribble in it if I want to.
You know when you read a book and just want to go for a drink with the author because they have your exact sense of humour. Yeah, that. Hit me up, Rachel.
This book will stay with me for a long time. Fiercely feminist, heartbreakingly raw and hilarious in equal measures. I'm totally on board with the Les Miserables obsession and the hatred of wanky bullshit cat-calling!!!
A personal, witty and humane sharing of advice prompted by one of her tours from audience members, Rachel has wise useful words for the modern world from an eclectic range of topics ranging from the irreverent to the traumatic. Heartily recommended. In particular books like these are would be a useful place for the various douchebag blokes out there who willfully or not, choose not to 'understand women'.
In 2017 Rachel Parris did a show at the Edinburgh festival which later toured the UK about being asked to deliver a keynote speech at her old school. At the shows she asked audiences to write down a piece of advice and hand it in. The advice was interwoven into the show but Parris has kept many of them to include in this book. Each chapter is based around one of the notes. Advice From Strangers has some very helpful advice in it but manages to avoid the 'twee' side of inspirational. It's also heavily autobiographical and strikes a balance between heartbreak and utter joy. If you're a fan of Rachel Parris' solo shows this will definitely be a familiar comforting tone and it makes for an essential read whether you know her or not.
Advice From Strangers is an interestingly multimedia value-squeezing book. It started when Rachel Parris, musical comedian and star of The Mash Report, was asked to give the end of year speech at her old school.
Unsure particularly what wisdom she had to pass on to hungry minds ready to step out into the world, she devised a simple premise for a show. She handed out blank slips of paper to audiences, they wrote a piece of advice that worked for them on the slips, she collected them, thought about them, discussed them, and gathered more.
Then a whole mess of Stuff happened. her success on The Mash Report also led her into severe experiences of online misogyny, including some vile stuff on incel boards. She met, fell in love with, and married fellow comedian Marcus Brigstocke. They slammed into lockdown and both their incomes more or less evaporated overnight - while she was also feeling her way into a merged family that included Brigstocke's children from a previous marriage.
They tried for a child of their own, and heartbreakingly, their first child died in utero. And ultimately, they had a son who was successfully born - all while the ongoing lockdowns were in place.
Advice From Strangers is a fairly broad spread of the advice that was given to Parris in her shows. She takes each one and either deals with it quickly, or in depth, bringing in her own experience to balance, validate, or discount the pithiness of the public's pocketfuls of wisdom.
It's an engaging book, both in the honesty Parris brings to the task of collecting useful "wisdom," and in the positive but balanced approach she takes to the nuggets of truth or nonsense suggested to her. She's furious, funny, concerned, open-minded, agonised and joyful by turns, depending on the advice and the period in her life she's describing.
She doesn't flinch from describing the trolling she's experienced, the nervous breakdown and mental health issues she went through, the horrendous experience of losing a child and then having to give birth to her, or the screaming, vomit-covered joy of having a son successfully next to her.
It's an affecting listen in places, but it's one that if you can, it's very much worth getting as an audio experience, because one of the joys of Parris' performances is exactly that - her performances, her vocal qualities. So you get more for your money with the audiobook version of Advice From Strangers than you would from the hard copy version - including the eventual song she wrote for the end of her school speech, which in the audio version comes sung, rather than as a poem on a page.
Advice From Strangers is fun, dramatic, powerful, bouncy, and fun again, and given the world as it is, there are far worse ways to spend a handful of hours than having Rachel Parris pass on some pearls of sometime-wisdom to you.
I love Rachel Parris. This book is raw and honest, funny, sad, and uplifting. Listening to the audiobook felt like hanging out with your best friend. I loved the content about mental health. Having been there myself, it is refreshing when people are honest about their experiences. I also loved the chapter about respecting women. Yay for women supporting women!
A funny, warm, angry and moving book from one of the UKs most talented comedians. Rachel takes on board advice from strangers and gives her own often highly personal take on it. I devoured this book in one sitting and was left feeling like Id had a warm hug. Highly recommended.
I was lucky enough to get a signed copy of this book, and could not wait to read it. It's a joy to read, so much so that I didn't want it to end.
I laughed and cried with the author, and I felt that I had found in the book someone that understands the pain of loss in a similar way to myself (does that make sense?)
Each chapter revolves around a different piece of advice, and Rachel shares her insights into each one - sometimes in ways I hadn't thought of, but always with a sense of heart and a lighthearted candour.
I loved this book, and sincerely hope that there will be a book #2
I planned all my holiday reading in advance and then I saw this book in the airport and I bought it. And it’s lovely. It’s poignant, it’s sad, it’s laugh out loud funny, it contains great advice relevant to all stages of life. And I totally recommend you read it. Probably better written for women but good all round and I totally recommend it. It was such a good book I was sad it was finished and slowed down my reading at the end so I still had some left the next day.
Read this on holiday and it was fine. Some of the insights I found thought provoking. A lot of the times I felt the joke-rambles fell flat for me (obviously just not my sense of humour). It felt a bit all over the place - a piece of advice would be given and it would be used to discuss a vaguely related subject. If that’s your sort of thing then definitely go for it. Bits I did enjoy were her reflections on grief and mental health.
Heartfelt and personal, with the perfect amount of humour and sincerity to make it feel like a good good chat with a great friend that you never want to end.
I liked Rachel Parris work prior to reading this, but now I admire her so much more. Tackling very difficult and not often talked about personal subjects and experience with tact, knowledge and kindness.
It was funny, thoughtful, tender, and really informative. I learned so much (like not to brag about pockets in clothing as it is part of male priviledge. I had no idea women's clothing had "stupid fake pockets" as it was something i really took for granted.)
This was an enjoyable romp through Parris' interpretations of advice solicited from audience members at her shows, interspersed with discussions around serious topics including miscarriage, mental health, and misogyny.
Thoughtful, insightful, honest, witty. It was impossible to put down. Literally. I read it over 2 evenings, and am now quite sleep deprived as a result. I shall have to choose something more boring to read next in order to fall asleep in a timely manner.
Not for me! I can just read the contents and get what each advice is about instead of reading her rambling on and on and then I still don’t k ow why is she talking about that is relating to the topic. And she is not funny.
I loved listening to this book. Clever, funny, sad, interesting, wise and wonderful. I enjoyed it all. Especially [spoiler alert] the song at the end and meeting new songs in chapter 11. My favourite book in ages x
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I laughed, I cried. This was very moving and I love the concept of how the idea for this book came about! I also have an urge to go and see Austentatious at some point so let’s hope it continues shows