New Teeth
Stories
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
Laugh till you cry in this new collection of stories from the award-winning “Serena Williams of humor writing” (New York Times Book Review) about raising babies and trying not to be one.
Called a “comedic Godsend” by Conan O’Brien and “the Stephen King of comedy writing” by John Mulaney, Simon Rich is back with New Teeth, his funniest and most personal collection yet.
Two murderous pirates find a child stowaway on board and attempt to balance pillaging with co-parenting. A woman raised by wolves prepares for her parents’ annual Thanksgiving visit. An aging mutant superhero is forced to learn humility when the mayor kicks him upstairs to a desk job. And in the hard-boiled caper “The Big Nap,” a weary two-year-old detective struggles to make sense of “a world gone mad.”
Equal parts silly and sincere, New Teeth is an ode to growing up, growing older, and what it means to make a family.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Rich's uneven humor collection (after Hits and Misses) features a series of clueless narrators trying to grapple with life while everyone else deals with it just fine. The author makes the most of this conceit in the amusing "Screwball," about Babe Ruth's lack of understanding of the world outside baseball. In "Chip," an office robot becomes obsolete after complaints about "his" "inability to socialize." Less successful stories include the toothless satire "Revolution," in which the privileged 14-year-old narrator thinks his valet is "grateful for the condescension" the narrator pays him in the form of requiring his presence at all times, even while using the bathroom. Rich can wring a laugh from irony, as in "Laserdisc," about a man who treasures his collection of films on the outdated format ("John would utter a phrase so erotic it was essentially physically irresistible: ‘You know, I actually have that on LaserDisc' "), but the stories tend to be one note. "Beauty and the Beast" feels like an extended commercial break for Disney, and "Case Study," a riff on The Elephant Man, gets silly, but not in a good way. Arguably the best entry is "The Big Nap," which is like The Big Sleep told from a two-year-old's point of view. If only the rest of the stories had been as clever.
Customer Reviews
Great stories
The stories in this book are great! I really annoyed my wife by constantly laughing my a@$ off while reading. Unfortunately for my wife, I am a slow reader.