Not So Funny When It Happened: The Best of Travel Humor and Misadventure (Travelers' Tales)
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Average customer review:Product Description
Some of the best adventure stories come from misadventures - the pratfalls, faux pas, and cringing embarrassments that accompany life on the road. These tales share those moments when the best of plans fall by the wayside - replaced by the unforeseen, leavened by the saving grace of a sense of humor. Tim Cahill is joined by such beloved authors as Dave Barry, Anne Lamott, David Sedaris, and Adair Lara.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1095236 in Books
- Published on: 2000-11-30
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 224 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Booklist
J. P. Donleavy, Nicholas Delbanco, and Dave Barry are among the 36 writers represented in this collection of droll travel tales. A baboon joins one travel writer in Zimbabwe for breakfast and refuses to leave. A French language class in Paris redefines the foundation of Christianity with a discussion of the Easter bunny. Another writer, warned not to tell the Vietnamese that he is divorced, invents intricate stories to explain his ex-wife's "accidental death." A fourth writer reflects on the subject of bad haircuts around the world, and another one tells of getting to the airport an hour early and then almost missing the plane. These stories are humorous, indeed. In a few cases the reader may have gone through a similar agonizing experience--one that was not the least bit funny at the time, but comical to look back on. George Cohen
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
"...delightful, often laugh-out-loud collection of traumatic travel tales..." -- Times-Picayune
"An amusing diversion, good for your next long flight." -- Kirkus Review
"Incredibly funny travel tales..." -- ForeWord
"Kirkus Review says, ‘An amusing diversion, good for your next long flight.’ I say it’s a fine diversion any time." -- The Mature Traveler
...full of short, funny, glad-it-didn't-happen-to-me stories sure to amuse those who enjoy writing or traveling..." -- Tennessean
Customer Reviews
Unfortunately, it isn't so funny now, either
Not So Funny When It Happened seems like a real winner. Edited by Tim Cahill, who has written a number of good adventure travel books, published by Travelers' Tales, who have the travel anthology down to a fine art, and full of travel humor, which we all know is wonderful. How can this book not be great?
It might have something to do with the limited material available. There isn't, relatively speaking, a lot of travel humor published, and much of it is written by just a few very talented authors. Not So Funny does contain all the big names, but at one story apiece, they don't come close to filling up the book. For the rest of the content, Cahill has to go to less known and unknown authors, or to those who don't usually write misadventure travel essays. Unfortunately, Travelers' Tales has been down this road very recently, with There's No Toilet Paper on the Road Less Traveled; in other words, the best unknown stuff has already been used. That leaves Not So Funny with a lot of marginal articles, plus a few good ones.
An additional caveat: if you like humor, you've probably read the big names - Bill Bryson, Tim Cahill, David Sedaris, Douglas Adams, Anne Lamott, Dave Barry - in this collection already. And the essays included in Not So Funny aren't among their least-known works by any means.
In short, while I liked the concept behind this book, the reality of it leaves much to be desired. It is, however, worth reading once or twice, especially for the devoted travel writing fan.
Not So Funny When You Read It
Unfortunately, _Not So Funny_ is really not that humorous. Given the contributing authors (including Dave Barry, Douglas Adams, Anne Lamott, and, of course, Tim Cahill) one would expect this collection to have you rolling in the aisles. But it simply doesn't work. The snippets may have fit very well in their original publications, but the misadventures in _Not So Funny_ are just not surprising or amusing enough as stand-alones.
I read this book while on an extremely long flight to South Africa. As such, it was bearable, but the stories shared by my co-passengers were considerably more appealing. Stick to Cahill's earlier works and avoid this haphazard assortment.
not particularly funny now, either
Mostly lame and unfunny anecdotes are contained and presented in this book. There were only a couple good laughs and they occurred in the last couple of selections.
Some selections didn't even seem particularly travel oriented, such as the one about infiltrating a fundamentalist Christian sect. And the one about the fox hunt was, I suppose, fairly representative of it's well-known author, J.P. Donleavy. But it was still very dense, overwritten and straining for humorousness. And it also didn't seem to have much of anything to do with travel.
Apart from just been dull, uninteresting and unfunny, the worst thing about this book were the little inserts, or sidebars, that were included on every other page. A number of them were, in fact, quotes from the TV show "Saturday Night Live"?!?!?! They were the little phony "thought for the day" things by "Jack Handey". For example: "I hope if dogs ever take over the world and they choose a king, they don't just go by size, because I bet there are some Chihauhuas with some good ideas"?!?! What is this only marginally clever re-cycled TV crud doing in a travel book?
Good thing I got this out of a library and didn't actually have to pay real money for it, or I would have really been unhappy.




