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I'll Mature When I'm Dead: Dave Barry's Amazing Tales of Adulthood |  | Author: Dave Barry Publisher: Putnam Adult Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $14.19 as of 9/10/2010 13:25 MDT details You Save: $10.76 (43%)
New (39) Used (17) Collectible (2) from $12.00
Seller: jeffzim8 Rating: 33 reviews Sales Rank: 18573
Media: Hardcover Pages: 272 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.7 x 1.1
ISBN: 039915650X Dewey Decimal Number: 814.54 EAN: 9780399156502 ASIN: 039915650X
Publication Date: May 4, 2010 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Amazon.com Review
Jen Lancaster and Dave Barry: Author One-on-One Jen Lancaster is a former vice president at an investor relations firm and a New York Times bestselling author. Her books include My Fair Lazy, Pretty in Plaid, and Bitter is the New Black. She replaced Dave Barry as writer for Humor Hotel, a nationally syndicated humor column.  Read on to see Jen Lancaster's questions for Dave Barry, or turn the tables to see what he asked her. Jen: The Pulitzer Prize looks a lot like those gold-colored one-dollar Sacagawea coins. Do you still have yours or did you accidentally use it in a parking meter? Dave: I actually lost my Pulitzer Prize for several years. I put it in a safe place, then I forgot where that was. My wife eventually found it and put it an even safer place. But your question disturbs me, because it’s NOT a coin: It looks more like a middle-school diploma. So now I’m wondering: Is it really a Pulitzer Prize? Maybe I was the victim of an elaborate practical joke wherein Columbia University gave me a middle-school diploma and just TOLD me it was a Pulitzer. That would make sense, because (a) nobody ever really believes I won a Pulitzer, and (b) in university circles Columbia is known as a big prankster. Jen: Does it indeed take a village? Dave: I actually grew up in a village, specifically the village of Armonk, New York. Everybody in Armonk knew everybody else back then, which meant that if, as a high-school student, you (and here I am using “you” in the sense of “I”) experimented a tad (and here I am using “a tad” in the sense of “way”) too heavily with adult beverages one night in the fall of 1964 and passed out on a lawn that—of all the lawns you could have picked in Armonk—was the lawn belonging to Chief of Police Hergenhan, you would not be arrested; instead, Chief Hergenhan, upon discovering you drooling facedown into his crabgrass at 1:30 a.m., would call your dad to come get you, because he knew your dad, and he also knew that you would spend approximately the next two weeks retching, which was punishment enough. So I would say yes. Jen: If X = Agent Jack Bauer and Y = shooting someone in the thigh, how many perimeters need to be set up to bring Edgar back to life? Dave: It depends on how long it takes Chloe to get a visual on the satellite and upload the schematics. Jen: Children seem to be more delicate than when we were kids. Do you advocate encasing them in Lucite until their eighteenth birthday? Dave: These kids today don’t know how easy they have it, with their iPhones and their iPads and their atmosphere consisting of 21 percent oxygen and 78 percent nitrogen and 1 percent various other gases. When I was a youngster we didn’t have ANYTHING. We didn’t even have HAIR. We sat around naked in the cold, sucking on rocks for nourishment. But you never heard us complain, and by God we licked the Great Depression and won World War II. No, wait, that was our parents’ generation. But we faced challenges of our own. Junior year abroad, for example. That was no picnic. So you don’t even want to KNOW what I think. Jen: Shirts or skins? Dave: You always want to be on the skins team, because that way you’re guarding a guy on the shirts team, which means if you touch him you’re touching his shirt, which is an okay way to touch another guy (for very a brief period). If you’re on the shirts team, you have to guard a guy on the skins team, which means you might come into contact with his actual skin, which is wrong on several levels, not the least of which is that he will be oozing perspiration slime, like a giant eel with b.o. This is the main reason why guys turn to golf. Jen: Will men use GPS or do they consider this the modern-day equivalent of stopping to ask for directions at the gas station—which is to say, an affront to their masculinity? Dave: It’s acceptable to use a GPS because it is an incomprehensibly complex electronic device and therefore manly. But it is NOT acceptable to use the same GPS for long periods of time. Every six months or so you must buy a newer model with more features that you don’t need and a larger screen. Screen size is the important thing. Your goal is to eventually have a GPS with a screen so large that you can’t see out your windshield; when you drive you’re just looking at this humongous GPS screen. But you are still wondering, deep inside, when they’re going to come out with a bigger one. Jen: Bret Michaels’s fans still throw their panties onstage when he performs. What do Rock Bottom Remainders groupies toss? Dave:We have had panties thrown at us. But they were labeled “MAXIMUM OCCUPANCY 30 PEOPLE.” (Photo of Jen Lancaster © Jeremy Lawson) (Photo of Dave Barry © Raul Ribiera/Miami Herald)
Product Description A brilliantly funny exploration of the treacherous state of adulthood by the Pulitzer Prize-winning humorist.
Some people may wonder what this subject has to do with Dave Barry, since Dave's struggled hard against growing up his entire life-but the result is one of the funniest, warmest, most pitch-perfect books ever on that mystifying territory we call "adulthood".
In hilarious, brand-new pieces, Dave tackles everything from fatherhood, new fatherhood ("Over the next five years, you will spend roughly 45 minutes, total, listening to songs you like, and roughly 127,000 hours to songs exploring topics such as how the horn on the bus goes* [*It goes: 'Beep! Beep! Beep!']"), self-image, the battle of the sexes, celebrityhood, technology, parenting styles, certain unmentionable medical procedures ("There is absolutely no reason to be afraid of a vasectomy, except that: THEY CUT A HOLE IN YOUR SCROTUM."), and much more. It is a book of pure delight from the man one newspaper claimed "could become the most important American humorist since Mark Twain" (South Florida Sun-Sentinel)...though, frankly, we think they were indulging in some adult beverages at the time.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 33
All-new material from the funniest man in America May 12, 2010 Julie Neal (Sanibel Island, Fla.) 15 out of 18 found this review helpful
Tears. They were rolling down my cheeks at the dentist's waiting room while I read this book, in a futile attempt to keep from laughing out loud. Oh how I love a new Dave Barry book.
And this material is truly new! Except for one essay, none of these pieces have been published before, which is rare for a Dave Barry book. And he is at the top of his game here, with 18 stories of what it means to be an adult.
Don't let the goofy low-rent cover fool you. Barry digs deep in this essay collection, and there is as much intelligent understanding and wisdom as humor. A couple of the essays are as touching as anything Anna Quindlen has written: The Heart of Dadness and Father of the Groom. These two moving explorations of parenthood brought on the tears again.
Barry will even make you call for a colonoscopy appointment. That's real power.
A few of my other favorite Dave Barry books:
Dave Barry's Only Travel Guide You'll Ever Need,
Dave Barry's Money Secrets: Like: Why Is There a Giant Eyeball on the Dollar?,
Dave Barry Slept Here: A Sort of History of the United States,
Dave Barry's Complete Guide to Guys and
Dave Barry Is Not Making This Up.
Here's the chapter list:
1. The Elephant and the Dandelion (In Defense of Man)
2. If You Will Just Shut Up, I Can Explain (A Man Answers Questions from Women)
3. The Heart of Dadness: A Letter to a First-Time-Father-To-Be
4. Dance Recital
5. Technology
6. Solving the Celebrity Problem
7. Tips for Visiting Miami (No. 1: Are You Insane?)
8. Dog Ownership for Beginners
9. My Hollywood Career: The Big Dumpster
10. 24: The Ultimate Script
11. The Full Coward Package
12. The Health-Care Crisis (Wash Your Hands After Reading This)
13. Colonoscopy
14. A Practical, Workable Plan for Saving the Newspaper Business (I Sure Don't Have One)
15. Judaism for Christians
16. Fangs of Endearment: A Vampire Novel
17. A Festival of Grimness
18. Father of the Groom
Finally! A Dave Barry book with fresh new material May 5, 2010 Just a guy (Westchester, NY) 20 out of 26 found this review helpful
Disclosure: I am a huge Dave Barry fan, and have been since the 80s.
I'll admit many of his past books have been essentially reprints of his newspaper articles. This book is different. It is fresh and full of new humor. I've read a good portion of his past work, and didn't recognize any of it as being repeated here. It also feels a bit longer than his past books.
Dave's observations of the world around him are always funny. Laugh out loud funny. I wouldn't buy this for reading on the subway or anywhere else where people will look at you funny when you randomly burst out laughing.
I'm not sure what else to say about this book. It is as funny as Dave has ever been and it is totally new and fresh material.
I loved it.
You'll Be Glad You Did May 6, 2010 Ridley Pearson 22 out of 29 found this review helpful
Full Disclosure: I am Dave's "sometimes writing partner" of the Starcatchers series. But, because of this, I'm one of Dave's (only) critics!
As a longtime Dave Barry fan, I feel like there's a hole in my Sunday newspaper. Like the kids got the scissors and cut out the most important part before I started reading: Dave's column.
It's back! I'll Mature When I'm Dead is as if an editor has taken two dozen columns THAT YOU'VE NEVER READ (columns that are TWICE AS LONG as those ever published in newspapers) and put them in one place for you. It's a treasure!
There is no need to recommend the pieces. Not if you've ever read Dave. Does he ever disappoint? I don't think so. You laugh, you groan, and you wince as he touches the truths of our everyday lives in ways we wish he wouldn't. There are dog stories, writing stories and even a vampire story parody. It's the best collection of his work, ever. And it's all new.
Simply put: NO ONE DOES IT BETTER. You will reread this book many times, and leave it someplace handy in order to do just that. It's that good.
A Funny and Witty Drink from the Fountain of Youth June 7, 2010 Bookreporter.com (New York, New York) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
One of the first book reviews I ever published was for DAVE BARRY TURNS FIFTY back in the day before Windows Millennium. Early on in that one, the former Pulitzer Prize winner wrote, "Come, fellow boomer. Take my hand and let us travel together on a voyage of exploration into our very favorite topic, which is us." "We" are still our favorite topic, and it's satisfying to report that age has done nothing to mellow his off-beat sense of humor. Except that he probably knocks work off a bit earlier to take advantage of the early bird specials in his native Florida.
He might have a few more gray hairs and an extra family or two that weren't there in 1998. But protestations to the contrary not withstanding, Barry has matured, dragging his fans along with him.
Is this a kinder, gentler Barry than we're used to, based on former titles such as DAVE BARRY HITS BELOW THE BELTWAY and DAVE BARRY IS NOT TAKING THIS SITTING DOWN, among his twenty-something books? Perhaps. Advanced age has given him a host of new topics to carp about as he helps us cope with whatever comes beyond Generation X technology, as well as a spot-on take on teenage vampire literature, the (r)evoution of male/female relationships, and the amazing ability of 24's Jack Bauer to refrain from visiting a restroom for eight years.
On a personal note, we discover his true feelings about attending his young daughter's dance recital and his son's wedding --- "true" being a relative term that changes depending on whether any of his current and/or former spouses are looking over his shoulder as he composes his essays. "If you ask any dad if fatherhood is worth it, he will immediately answer yes. Why? Because his wife might be listening."
On an uncharacteristically serious note, he uses his wit to extol the virtues of getting a colonoscopy, a topic that was way off his map until one of his brothers tested positive for colon cancer. He also discusses his vasectomy, but in a much more Barryan manner (I dare anyone to look at a bag of frozen peas the same way again). In fact, such procedures allow him to further opine on the whole health care industry in light of the Obama administration's recent goals, as well as the diminishing newspaper industry, which he had the foresight to leave several years ago. Insider information, I guess.
The former Pulitzer Prize winner --- now a feisty 62 --- is the Peter Pan for the boomer generation. He won't grow up any more than is absolutely necessary, which in his case means not at all.
Now there's a role model.
I'll Mature When I'm Dead July 9, 2010 Elinor J. Brecher (Miami, FL) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I gave one copy to a close friend turning 60 and the other to my significant other, turning 66. Predictable hilarity ensued. Dave is one of the most reliably funny writers alive (he's also a former Miami Herald colleague, so I was lucky enough to get the books signed - in amusing fashion, of course). For the record, Dave is as funny in real life as he is on the page - and a seriously nice guy.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 33
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