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| Notes from a Small Island | 
enlarge | Author: Bill Bryson Publisher: Doubleday Category: Book
List Price: £12.99 Buy Used: £7.09 You Save: £5.90 (45%)
New (1) from £7.14
Avg. Customer Rating: 133 reviews Sales Rank: 585097
Media: Hardcover Edition: New Ed Pages: 288 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 5.5 x 1.5
ISBN: 0385600739 Dewey Decimal Number: 910 EAN: 9780385600736 ASIN: 0385600739
Publication Date: September 2, 1999 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: Book in perfect condition but dust cover slightly creased on top edge so priced accordingly.
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| Customer Reviews:
Funny January 6, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I'm really enjoying reading this book. A couple of nights ago I was in bed reading Chapter 11 (the rainy night in Weston-Super-Mare) and laughed so hard I was in pain. I kept letting out the occasional gasp for air as the tears rolled. I had to keep the noise down as my girlfriend was asleep but the part where he tries to remember the name of the kick-boxing arcade game was too much and I've been chuckling about it for the past few days. A very enjoyable read.
Rants about a Small Island January 6, 2008 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
This was the fifth Bryson book that I have read and by far the most disappointing. The appeal of the other books of his that I've read (Short History, Thunderbolt, Mother Tongue, Walk in the Woods) is that they had provided a dose of iteresting trivia in an easy to read format (although I've seldom found them "laugh-out-loud funny" as many a reviewer seems to have done.) Small Island is just about as pointless a book as you could imagine. A journey around some random places in Britain with little in the way of description, history, geography, dialogue with locals or anything else. Instead we're treated to the sorts of rants that any person travelling on their own for eight weeks might have. He hates big dogs, people with interests that he doesn't share, anyone who makes an innocent mistake, architecture, etc. etc. etc. Almost anyone (with two months holiday and a limitless budget) could have written this book but I would suggest that most would have done it better.
Great book that is now a little dated November 21, 2007 0 out of 4 found this review helpful
Bryson needs to re-write this book. By this I mean he should travel around Britain once more and write a new book based on his experiences. The reason for that is that Notes is now somewhat dated - it was written in the early 1990s and since then the nation has changed enormously. (His criticisms of the then Tory government have dated particularly badly when we now know how corrupt and incompetent its successor is.) I'd say that much of what Bryson came across is now very different or has just disappeared. Will he be wise and courageous enough to note these changes? It's a shame that he rarely pens travel books nowadays. A few more observations on this book: it starts superbly; the first chapter set in Dover in the 1970s is funny and nostalgic and cosy and sets a standard that the rest of it can't quite live up to. If it had continued like this it would have been the funniest and most precious book ever written. Bryson is occasionally prickly and spiky, nothing like the avuncular image he seems to have acquired. The incident in the McDonald's illustrates this - the chap behind the counter was only doing his job. For me, the whole idea of a man wandering round towns and cities alone is quite evocative and a little sad. But I admire his courage in doing so. His experiences of pubs and Chinese restaurants really make you feel something. Sitting alone in a restaurant has always seemed to me an excruciating experience. However, if you have a copy of this book on me it may be more tolerable. Did I forget to say it's highly enjoyable?
I have read it again and again October 18, 2007 I love this book. I first read it when it came out and loved it. Now I read bits of it again and again. It's really funny and good to see what he says about places you know well or visit. I like the contrasts between the England of the 1970s when I was a child and of the 90s.Reading this has inspired me to read other travel books at the moment I am on 'Looking for England' by H.V Morton-written in the 1920s.
A polemic against bad town planning August 29, 2007 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
I first came across this book when I was at college over ten years ago and although it hasn't aged well it is still a very funny read. Yes, it is historically inaccurate (hence the 4 stars instead of 5 - the research could have been a bit more thorough) and yes, it is one long winge, but Bryson has something to winge about and winges very well. Something in Britain went horribly wrong in the 60s, 70s and 80s (and probably continues to go horribly wrong) and it went especially horribly wrong with building conservation and town planning. Britain in the early nineties was just waking up to the fact that communities had allowed the demolition of their most important buildings. This book was one of the slaps in the face that forced people to come round. A foreigner (a Yank, no less) telling us that we had all but wrecked our built environment? Well yes. Yes we had. Thank goodness now we are much more wise to the worst excesses of developers and planners (there is still room for improvement). Thank goodness for people like Bryson.
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