Friends Like These: My Worldwide Quest to Find My Best Childhood Friends, Knock on Their Doors, and Ask Them to Come Out and Play
by:
Danny Wallace (author)
Danny Wallace has friends. He has a wife and goes to brunch, and his new house has a couch with throw pillows. But as he nears 30, he can't help wondering about his best childhood friends, whose names he finds in a long-forgotten address book. Where are they now-and where, really, is he? Acting...
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Danny Wallace has friends. He has a wife and goes to brunch, and his new house has a couch with throw pillows. But as he nears 30, he can't help wondering about his best childhood friends, whose names he finds in a long-forgotten address book. Where are they now-and where, really, is he? Acting on an impulse we've all had at least once, he travels from London to Berlin, Tokyo, Australia, and California, risking rejection and ridicule to show up on his old pals' doorsteps. Memories of his 1980s childhood-from Michael Jackson to Ghostbusters-overwhelm him as he meets former buddies who have blossomed into rappers and ninjas, time-traveling pioneers, mediocre restaurant managers, and even Fijian royalty. Danny's attempt to re-befriend them all gives remarkable new resonance to the age-old mantra, "friends forever!"
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Format: hardcover
ISBN:
9780316042772 (0316042773)
Publish date: September 2nd 2009
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company
Pages no: 416
Edition language: English
Category:
Childrens,
Non Fiction,
Travel,
Humor,
Autobiography,
Memoir,
Biography,
Funny,
Comedy,
European Literature,
British Literature
In the note card system which passes for my memory, Danny Wallace's entry reads simply: Friend of Dave Gorman(?) Which is kind of weird when you consider that Wallace has not only done all manner of things, but many of them have cropped up on my radar. I've read Charlotte Street, his first for...
An exceptionally good concept which should be copied by writers with slighly richer lives as children. Some of the old schoolmates he contacts seem genuinely confused regarding his purpose, while others don't get a full treatment as human beings it seems. Finally, the fact that the book may have sta...