Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Search - Friends like these

Friends like these
Friends like these
Author: Danny Wallace
Danny is about to turn 30. He is worried about feeling, well, too grown up. He finds an old address book of his containing 12 names of his best mates he had as a kid. Where are they now? Who are they and how are THEY coping with being grown up? — And so begins his journey....from Berlin to Tokyo, LA and Loughborough.... — How will they feel abou...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780091896775
ISBN-10: 0091896770
Publication Date: 3/2/2009
Pages: 407
Rating:
  • Currently 5/5 Stars.
 1

5 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: ebury press
Book Type: Paperback
Members Wishing: 1
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review
Read All 1 Book Reviews of "Friends like these"

Please Log in to Rate these Book Reviews

poohbritt avatar reviewed Friends like these on + 37 more book reviews
Reviewed by Bookish Britt for www.luxuryreading.com

Remember when you were about knee-high and swore you would be best friends forever with whoever you'd bonded with over recess? Had those bracelets with two halves of a heart, pinky-swore, or did one of the various things to reassure your naïve self that no matter what, you'd always keep in touch. I know I did. With the help of social networking sites like Facebook, we are lulled into complacency that we've reconnected with our past BFF's. But Danny Wallace, author of âYes Man,â actually did the hard part of tracking down the friends in his elementary school address book and meeting the past with the present.

Right around when Wallace realized that his 30th birthday ways looming overhead, he realized that this milestone meant he had to be a man. He had to accept throw pillows (not for bottoms!), decorative coasters, and sausage of the month clubs. While he was sifting through a box containing his past: old drawings, photos, world cup stickers, ect, he decided that the best way to move forward was to look back. He had to track down his old friends and ask them to âcome out and play,â even if it involved 3 continents and correspondence as a furry. What follows is the hilarious and awkward quest that leads to Danny discovering that his friends had solved time travel, become famous German rappers, and are even part of the Fijian royal family.

I'm really not sure what I'd do if someone from 20-some-odd years ago knocked on my door to recollect our shared childhood. To top it all off, many parts of this book have those moments that are side-splittingly funny, but make you wonder how anyone gets into that situation. I won't give it all away, but if you've seen the movie âYes Man,â you will appreciate the humor. It also had its fair share of reflection on life in general, and the transition from âkidulthood,â when you eat Doritos and cup o' noodle, to being a full fledged adult. It is a serious memoir in a humorous light-hearted wrapper. A candy bar with a chewy caramel center.


Genres: