Every Day Is An Atheist Holiday by Penn Jillette
Give or take a year or two, it’s been a quarter of a century since I first came across a television show featuring a pair of magicians who stopped me in my metaphorical tracks by performing a series of jaw dropping tricks, then showing the audience exactly how they were done, and then doing them again, but in such a way that even having been shown the old man behind the curtain I still sat there, slack mouthed, exclaiming “How do they do that?”
A large part of what attracted me to Penn & Teller was the larger part of the duo, Penn Jillette, whose self-deprecating monologues held audiences captivated while he did all manner of terrible but eminently watchable things to his smaller, silent partner, Teller (some of which, as he reveals, were too rich for the likes of The Tonight Show).
Over the subsequent years I’ve enjoyed watching Penn & Teller perform their hugely entertaining magic, and Jillette perform as himself (or the version of himself that he is when the cameras are rolling) on chat shows and the like, but I’d never read anything by him, not even one of his many columns, until I got hold of an advance copy of his new book, Every Day Is An Atheist Holiday.
As the title suggests, and following on from his previous book God, No! Jillette is an atheist (as is Teller as it happens), and a proud one at that, but while there was a part of me that was worried I was about to be hit over the head by a Dawkins-esque mantra, I was pleasantly surprised to find that while his atheism is an ever present part of his writing, it’s never overtly in your face, and when he does discuss it directly it’s in a calm and rational way. There’s no attempt to bludgeon you into submission, but rather Jillette is happy to proclaim his belief (or lack of it, to be pedantic) and respect whatever point of view anybody else may have.
As interesting as Jillette’s musings on atheism are, though, where Every Day Is An Atheist Holiday really shines is when he talks about his experience on the American version of Celebrity Apprentice (turns out he’s no great fan of Donald Trump, but he does have a respect for him) and Dancing With The Stars, pulling aside the curtains on these shows as deftly as he does his illusions, and in the many tales drawn from the long and illustrious career that he and his best friend and partner Teller have shared over the last three decades.
From wince inducing yarns about bloodied testicles, to the time they played an elaborate practical joke on a Nobel Peace Prize winner (and had the favour returned), to insights into the early days of Penn & Teller, Every Day Is An Atheist Holiday is both funny and at times moving but never less than entertaining. Quite simply, it’s magic!