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Holidays On Ice

Holidays On Ice

List Price: $8.95
Your Price: $8.06
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Terrible
Review: An Abominable book - I have read Dress Your Family which I recommend but this thing is trash.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fantastically Written
Review: <br />Once again David Sedaris outdoes himself with this witty yet poignant book. Well worth the time to read and extremely hard to put down. <br /><br />Also recommended: Nightmares Echo,If I Knew Then,Dress Your Family In Corduroy And Denim<br />

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Not what was expected
Review: I read Sedaris' "Dress Your Kids in Curduroy and Denim" *I think I got the title right) and found it hilarious. So when I saw this by the same author in the bookstore, I bought it. NOT WHAT I EXPECTED.
The first story, "SantaLand Diaries" is hilarious, though. The best story in the book. I probably liked it so much because it was based on his life, (at least I think so), while the other stoies were unclear and coming from another person's point of view. I guess I like Sedaris' writing because he turns his own experiences that seem so ordinary and well, sometimes odd experiences, into such hilarious stories. So when I read this, I was expecting to read another compilation of funny stories like those he wrote about in "Dress Your ..." But I guess not. If you want to read the "SantaLand Diaries," I suggest you buy the other book that has it nd not spend the money for four other stories that aren't his best.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: If You Read Nothing Else From Sedaris
Review:
You need to read his 'SantaLand Diaries,' which is a kind of journal of his days employed as an ELF for Macy's department store in New York City. If you've ever felt humiliated at your job (and most of us have) check this out! It's truly hilarious and strangely comforting. Sedaris is my anti-stress medicine these days. A reminder that laughter is the best medicine. Check out this book! Also recommended: Without Feathers by Woody Allen, The Losers' Club by Richard Perez

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Marvelous
Review: David Sedaris does it again with Holidays on Ice. We learn more about his family, more about him, and why he is such a beloved memoirist.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Gripping
Review: This is a hilarious book. It made me laugh and laugh. That is the uniqueness of the "Holidays on Ice" book by David Sedaris. You may want to pity the characters, yet they are amusing in the way they deal with situations in the stories. It is easy for us to relate to the characters, because we have types like them everywhere around. I can understand why many people love this book too.

Also recommended: THE USURPER AND OTHER STORIES,EVERYTHING'S EVENTUAL, DISCIPLES OF FORTUNE

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Beware of thin ice
Review: Like many other people, my introduction to David Sedaris was through "The Santaland Diaries," broadcast on NPR's "This American Life" (I think). Maybe it was Sedaris's down-on-his luck history, his brooding delivery, or Ira Glass's fabulous production, but the readings (and their musical segués) were masterpieces. They captured all the ironies of the Christmas holiday -- the humiliation of grown people wearing elf costumes to bring in a few bucks; the madness of parents force-feeding reluctant children into the gaping maw of Macy's Christmas machine; the delicious naughtiness of elves cavorting behind the snowy scenery; the stinginess of the retail business to its own employees.

Now that Sedaris has become successful, his readings have lost their desperate edginess. And without Glass's sure and sensitive production, they lose their aural appeal. I'd recommend reading these stories rather than listening to audio versions.

That said, "Holiday on Ice" has a few delights that make it worth a listen. "Santaland Diaries," still has a few moments that will have you shaking your head at the lunacy of the Christmas experience. The encounters between the physically and mentally disabled with all-too-human Santas is an exercise in pathos, if not hilarity. "Dinah, the Christmas Whore" is a classic Sedaris piece, whose innocuous beginning lurches without warning into a collision between David's wacked-out family and the bizarre Southern characters that populated Sedaris's youth. For an added treat, "Dinah" is voiced by Amy Sedaris, the author's talented sister.

Other pieces don't succeed as well as these. "Based Upon A True Story" has a creepy, big-city TV exec blackmailing a "hillbilly" Christmas church audience, but seems more mean than mirthful. "Front Row Center with Thaddeus Bristol" -- in which a theater critic savages children's Christmas pageants -- misses the comic mark entirely. Others, like, "Season's Greeting To Our Friends and Family!" -- a loonily bitter Christmas letter from a suburban Mom hurled over the edge of sanity and civility by her husband's long-lost Vietnamese daughter -- fail to play the knife-edge that separates a piece that finds humor in discomfort from one that is plain discomfitting.

Since the publication of "Holidays on Ice," David Sedaris has proven himself as a writer of subtlety, humanity and wry humor. This uneven collection shows him on the way to discovering his voice.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Seasonal Cocktail
Review: This book got me through November and December, two months when I'm weighed down with holiday depression. Sedaris crafts these stories with sincerity and humor and he makes you ponder how such events could ever happen. You'll read the book in a matter of hours because of its shortness, but the following year, you'll want to pick it up again and revisit the hilarity.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: most stories are a must read
Review: I have to agree with one of the other reviews, the first story about the Santaland stood out nore than the others, but I would give the story about the baby in the dryer just as much credit for being just as creative and almost as funny. This is a book that you will find yourself laughing outloud, which I have never done before until now. The best part is that it is small enough to fit in a purse and the stories are short enough to read while trying to waste time. I gave it four stars because there were a couple stories that drug on and could have been deleted and the author is very forgiving when you read another one of his right after

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: I love you David, sorry for the three stars
Review: I have read Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim and Me Talk Pretty One Day. I love them both with everything in me. So, I was very excited to backtrack and read Holidays on Ice. I waited until I went to New York for Christmas and took the book with me with high hopes. I was very disappointed. I was not aware that a lot of Sedaris' early writing was simply fiction and did not really have grounding in his family or life--most of this book is like that. The stories are mildly entertaining and imaginative. They seemed even darker than usual and even more cynical than I could handle, which I found strange. David's cynical outlook framed in a humorous, matter-of-fact manner is one of the things I love about him. A couple of the entries in this book almost made me feel dirty, due to disturbing violent imagery. However, the very thing, which took it way over the top, also is what helped get the point across. I would still recommend this book for any Sedaris fan. Don't read it to get in the Christmas mood and you will be fine, come at it with the framework as a social commentary.


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