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How Did You Get This Number
Sloane Crosley
€ 13.99
€ 10.51
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Description for How Did You Get This Number
Paperback. A sparkling second book from the bestselling author of I Was Told There'd Be Cake in which Crosley leaves her familiar stomping ground of Manhattan to travel The World: elegant writing, mordant wit and genuine insight. Num Pages: 240 pages, ill. BIC Classification: BM; DNF; WH. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 199 x 133 x 20. Weight in Grams: 212.
What happens when the minibus full of your fellow wedding travellers hits a bear in the middle of the Alaskan wilderness? Or you hear the voice of your high school's long lost queen bee from a bathroom cubicle? Why is there always a moment of utter disorientation when you emerge at street level from the tube station, no matter how many times you make the journey? It seems that Sloane Crosley can barely step outside her front door without being reminded of just how perplexing and absurd adult life can be. With her characteristic brio, Sloane recounts her amusing attempts to navigate the bumps of daily life. Pleasant existential confusion awaits you.
Product Details
Publisher
Portobello Books
Number of pages
240
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2011
Condition
New
Number of Pages
240
Place of Publication
London, United Kingdom
ISBN
9781846272264
SKU
V9781846272264
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 5 to 9 working days
Ref
99-99
About Sloane Crosley
SLOANE CROSLEY's work has appeared in the New York Times, The Village Voice, GQ, Playboy and numerous other literary journals and websites. This is her second book.
Reviews for How Did You Get This Number
Crosley's charm is her spry tone, the perfect match of form to content
Emma Brockes
Guardian
Shines a bold comic light on life's everyday absurdities
Sunday Telegraph
Crosley winningly captures that stumble into true adulthood, trying to get to grips with her own life with all the sangfroid of a teenager and the anxiety of someone in middle age. The result is generous, terrifically bright and charmingly unhinged
Laurence Mackin
Irish Times
One part Carrie Bradshaw, one part Dorothy Parker but with a sharp humour that's all her own, Crosley writes about her life in NYC without being too cool. Imagine your wittiest friend on life in the Big Apple
Grazia
Talented, twisted and often the subject of literary comparisons ... Crosley's eye for detail, particularly the absurd or tragic, is dangerously sharp
Independent
Nicely odd and genuinely touching
Daily Mail
With a talent for analytical insight that strays well into the territory of neurosis, Sloane Crosley scores exceedingly high on the mordant New York Jewish humour scale. Her first collection of essays, 2008's I Was Told There'd Be Cake, and its follow-up, How Did You Get This Number, establish her as the ideal humorist for the thirtysomething female urbanite ... Crosley's humour sparkles like a black diamond in this second collection as she undertakes voyages into foreign territories and muses on her own history and the human condition ... her wit and flashes of wisdom make her an entertaining commentator on the pitfalls of contemporary life
Tina Jackson
Metro
Sloane Crosley is the queen of satire and we love her for it ... she takes life's little absurdities and turns them into laugh-out-loud vignettes ... her writing is ferociously funny, razor-sharp and packed full of insight. Conversational and astute every sentence is epigrammatic ... a manual for anyone trying to navigate adult life without a map.
Stylist
Why we love her: She's the female David Sedaris.
Flavorwire
She aims a barrage of one-liners sardonic observations and comic set-pieces at the reader's head ... She is particularly funny when, visiting Paris and Lisbon, she gives us fresh variations on the theme of the hapless tourist.
Sunday Times
Yet there's more to our whip-smart heroine than meets the eye. We see the substance beneath the style in unexpected places, such as a bar in Lisbon, where Crosley attempts to communicate with a group of Portuguese clowns-in-training, or a confessional in Notre Dame (perhaps a first for Jewish girls from Westchester). The longest essay, "Off the Back of a Truck," is a rhapsodic piece that, while occasionally entering the Carrie Bradshaw School of Literature territory, never loses its grip on reality. If only that could be said for more people.
Time Out New York
The witty, smart, skilled workings of a wordsmith that thrust the reader into laugh-out-loud territory. As in her previous collection of short essays, "I Was Told There'd Be Cake," Crosley captivates the reader from the very first sentence: "There is only one answer to the question: Would you like to see a 3 a.m. performance of amateur Portuguese circus clowns?"We are brought along in Crosley's dissection of both the mundane and the extraordinary in nine stories that take us far beyond New York, where the author lives and which inspired many of the stories in her first book. There are bear sightings in Alaska and musings on cheese in Paris. And along the way, there are too many expertly penned and laugh-inducing lines to quote, much like David Sedaris, the humorist whose style Crosley sometimes echoes... Even in the occasional moment in which Crosley's prose fails to entirely captivate, not far off is another riff, another musing dripping with both silliness and smarts that make her worthy of your attention and bound to be a fixture on bookshelves for years to come.
Huffington Post
Crosley is like a tap-dancer, lighthearted and showman-like, but capable of surprising you with the reserves of emotion and keen social observation that motivate the performance.
New York Times
How sure footed and observant Sloane Crosley is. How perfectly, relentlessly funny. If you needed a bib while reading I Was Told There'd Be Cake, you might consider diapers for How Did You Get This Number.
David Sedaris
Emma Brockes
Guardian
Shines a bold comic light on life's everyday absurdities
Sunday Telegraph
Crosley winningly captures that stumble into true adulthood, trying to get to grips with her own life with all the sangfroid of a teenager and the anxiety of someone in middle age. The result is generous, terrifically bright and charmingly unhinged
Laurence Mackin
Irish Times
One part Carrie Bradshaw, one part Dorothy Parker but with a sharp humour that's all her own, Crosley writes about her life in NYC without being too cool. Imagine your wittiest friend on life in the Big Apple
Grazia
Talented, twisted and often the subject of literary comparisons ... Crosley's eye for detail, particularly the absurd or tragic, is dangerously sharp
Independent
Nicely odd and genuinely touching
Daily Mail
With a talent for analytical insight that strays well into the territory of neurosis, Sloane Crosley scores exceedingly high on the mordant New York Jewish humour scale. Her first collection of essays, 2008's I Was Told There'd Be Cake, and its follow-up, How Did You Get This Number, establish her as the ideal humorist for the thirtysomething female urbanite ... Crosley's humour sparkles like a black diamond in this second collection as she undertakes voyages into foreign territories and muses on her own history and the human condition ... her wit and flashes of wisdom make her an entertaining commentator on the pitfalls of contemporary life
Tina Jackson
Metro
Sloane Crosley is the queen of satire and we love her for it ... she takes life's little absurdities and turns them into laugh-out-loud vignettes ... her writing is ferociously funny, razor-sharp and packed full of insight. Conversational and astute every sentence is epigrammatic ... a manual for anyone trying to navigate adult life without a map.
Stylist
Why we love her: She's the female David Sedaris.
Flavorwire
She aims a barrage of one-liners sardonic observations and comic set-pieces at the reader's head ... She is particularly funny when, visiting Paris and Lisbon, she gives us fresh variations on the theme of the hapless tourist.
Sunday Times
Yet there's more to our whip-smart heroine than meets the eye. We see the substance beneath the style in unexpected places, such as a bar in Lisbon, where Crosley attempts to communicate with a group of Portuguese clowns-in-training, or a confessional in Notre Dame (perhaps a first for Jewish girls from Westchester). The longest essay, "Off the Back of a Truck," is a rhapsodic piece that, while occasionally entering the Carrie Bradshaw School of Literature territory, never loses its grip on reality. If only that could be said for more people.
Time Out New York
The witty, smart, skilled workings of a wordsmith that thrust the reader into laugh-out-loud territory. As in her previous collection of short essays, "I Was Told There'd Be Cake," Crosley captivates the reader from the very first sentence: "There is only one answer to the question: Would you like to see a 3 a.m. performance of amateur Portuguese circus clowns?"We are brought along in Crosley's dissection of both the mundane and the extraordinary in nine stories that take us far beyond New York, where the author lives and which inspired many of the stories in her first book. There are bear sightings in Alaska and musings on cheese in Paris. And along the way, there are too many expertly penned and laugh-inducing lines to quote, much like David Sedaris, the humorist whose style Crosley sometimes echoes... Even in the occasional moment in which Crosley's prose fails to entirely captivate, not far off is another riff, another musing dripping with both silliness and smarts that make her worthy of your attention and bound to be a fixture on bookshelves for years to come.
Huffington Post
Crosley is like a tap-dancer, lighthearted and showman-like, but capable of surprising you with the reserves of emotion and keen social observation that motivate the performance.
New York Times
How sure footed and observant Sloane Crosley is. How perfectly, relentlessly funny. If you needed a bib while reading I Was Told There'd Be Cake, you might consider diapers for How Did You Get This Number.
David Sedaris