This is my last entry for my Official Audio Book Review Week--looks like I'll only have four entries instead of five. But, oh, what a book it was! If you have ever read my blog before, you might know about my love for Bill Bryson. I've read more of his books than any other author's, and I've even read every word of his reference books. This is all the more unusual since Bryson is a nonfiction writer and I'm an unapologetic reader of novels and not much else. I've even had the pleasure of meeting the man not once, but twice, and they were two of the best days of my adult life. The fact that he would still have very little, if any, awareness of my existence is not a justifiable reason for suicide, or so I keep telling myself. Every day.
Anyway, I read The Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid back when it was first published, and my husband reminded me that we had listened to the audio of this book together during a trip to Hawaii (we did a lot of driving on the Big Island), which I had all but forgotten. So finishing up this audio book in my car last night was more like revisiting an old friend on two levels--both the content and the performance. Bryson is an excellent reader of his own books and I estimate that I've listened to his voice for upwards of 100 hours.
This book is a memoir of his childhood growing up in Des Moines, Iowa. He was the youngest of three children, born to a mother and father who both worked for the Des Moines Register (the local newspaper) at a time when not many women worked outside of the home, or at least not many wives and mothers. He grew up in a time of wonder (childhood in general) but also a time of national fear (the cold war, the Bay of Pigs, etc) and this juxtaposition makes for a pretty entertaining read.
Based on what I've read in his other books, I feel as if I generally have a good idea of Bryson's politics and social values, which is why some of the content in this memoir was all the more surprising. I don't actually believe that Bryson is a man who objectifies women or is homophobic (he does, alas, appear to be rather anti-Southern in most of his books), but those things were both present in his memoir. That is, he spends a good bit of time specifically recalling the urgency with which he tries to enter the stripper tent year after year at the Iowa State Fair and trying to see naked women in general. Though Bryson becomes fast friends with a gay boy in his teens, there are the casual references to the negative social repercussions for kids who acted/looked/dressed gay, and the use of "gay" as a pejorative.
After a bit of reflection, I think Bryson was more likely trying to show an accurate reflection of growing up in middle America in the 1950s and 1960s, rather than trying to reflect his current views on anything in particular.
The downside, of course, of listening to a very funny audio book is that it's nearly impossible to excerpt my favorite parts in a review. Clearly it would take far more effort than I'm willing to expend to go find my copy of the actual book, flip through it, and decide which parts to quote here. So, suffice it to say that listening to Bryson is a singularly excellent experience. If you've never read him before, I wouldn't necessarily recommend starting with Thunderbolt Kid--try A Walk in the Woods or In A Sunburned Country instead and prepare to be entertained and enlightened at once.
Anyway, I read The Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid back when it was first published, and my husband reminded me that we had listened to the audio of this book together during a trip to Hawaii (we did a lot of driving on the Big Island), which I had all but forgotten. So finishing up this audio book in my car last night was more like revisiting an old friend on two levels--both the content and the performance. Bryson is an excellent reader of his own books and I estimate that I've listened to his voice for upwards of 100 hours.
This book is a memoir of his childhood growing up in Des Moines, Iowa. He was the youngest of three children, born to a mother and father who both worked for the Des Moines Register (the local newspaper) at a time when not many women worked outside of the home, or at least not many wives and mothers. He grew up in a time of wonder (childhood in general) but also a time of national fear (the cold war, the Bay of Pigs, etc) and this juxtaposition makes for a pretty entertaining read.
Based on what I've read in his other books, I feel as if I generally have a good idea of Bryson's politics and social values, which is why some of the content in this memoir was all the more surprising. I don't actually believe that Bryson is a man who objectifies women or is homophobic (he does, alas, appear to be rather anti-Southern in most of his books), but those things were both present in his memoir. That is, he spends a good bit of time specifically recalling the urgency with which he tries to enter the stripper tent year after year at the Iowa State Fair and trying to see naked women in general. Though Bryson becomes fast friends with a gay boy in his teens, there are the casual references to the negative social repercussions for kids who acted/looked/dressed gay, and the use of "gay" as a pejorative.
After a bit of reflection, I think Bryson was more likely trying to show an accurate reflection of growing up in middle America in the 1950s and 1960s, rather than trying to reflect his current views on anything in particular.
The downside, of course, of listening to a very funny audio book is that it's nearly impossible to excerpt my favorite parts in a review. Clearly it would take far more effort than I'm willing to expend to go find my copy of the actual book, flip through it, and decide which parts to quote here. So, suffice it to say that listening to Bryson is a singularly excellent experience. If you've never read him before, I wouldn't necessarily recommend starting with Thunderbolt Kid--try A Walk in the Woods or In A Sunburned Country instead and prepare to be entertained and enlightened at once.
I lurve this book. It's up there as one of the ones I most often re-read. (you know, and also all of them). I know there are a few times in general with his books that he'll say something...less than PC and I sort of remind myself "different time." I definitely need some Bryson audiobooks.
ReplyDelete"less than PC" is a good way to describe it! But yes, he is wonderful. And until I read this book, I had always said "chaise lounge" instead of "chaise longue." So BOOM, practical knowledge imparted!
DeleteYES I think of this book whenever I see "chaise longue". Though I have started just saying "chaise" and leaving off lounge/longue. It's too stressful to say the other word, cos you're either wrong or everyone assumes you're wrong or pretentious. (See also why I hate ordering gyros.)
DeleteYes. I'll occasionally write chaise longue and put it in italics, but I almost always default to just chaise.
Deletere: ordering gyros: hmm, maybe i don't actually know what's what there. at the greek restaurant in the town i went to college we always just said yee-ro. what is the right way?
yee-ro is totally the right way to say it, but a lot of places people say "ji-ro" but that's not right. It's lose lose in my world, but that's because I'm very awkward and I don't want to be wrong but I also don't want to sound pretentious saying the actual pronunciation that no one else uses
DeleteI haven't read this one yet, (but I do own it) possibly because I'm a bit like 'hmm, am I that interested in Bryson as a person, or do I just want to read him writing about other stuff?' I think the answer is 'both', but still haven't read this yet!
ReplyDeleteALSO- obviously I can't really say this having not read this yet, BUT trying to see strippers/naked ladies totally sounds like the kind of thing a teen Iowan boy would do, and I don't really think of it as necessarily objectifying? BUT I'll let you know more when I actually read it :)
Oh, you definitely need to read this one, Laura. His exaggerations for comic effect in this book are so funny.
DeleteLet's just say he makes about 1,000 references to wanting to see and/or touch naked girls and/or women in this book. It got a little old by about the 467th reference or so.
BTW, he confesses/reveals a surprising amount of unlawful behavior in the final chapters of this book, so I guess the statutes of limitation had expired by the time it was published.
So, I've finally read my first Mary Roach. Clearly I need to read my first Bill Bryson sometime soon, hopefully this year. Everyone loves him so much!
ReplyDeleteREAD HIM. READ HIM NOW. Or you know, whenever. I actually have the feeling that you might find him a *teensy* bit whiny if you read A Walk in the Woods, so maybe start with something else if you're going to go there. You'd probably really like his more science-y book called A Short History of Nearly Everything.
DeleteI must confess that I've haven't read Bryson yet, but A Short History is on my tbr list! I know that you and a million other people are big fans, so I'm looking forward to reading his books.
ReplyDeleteI read "Thunderbolt Kid" years ago but am looking forward to listening to his wonderful, soothing voice on CD. He's a winner, whether you read it or listen to it.
ReplyDelete