The best medicine for the season
If laughter is the best medicine, you might need a double dose
during the hectic holiday season, when anyone with less than a
stellar sense of humor might fail to appreciate the extraordinary
times in which we live.
Rather than heading for your nearest pharmacy, look to Newport
Beach Public Library shelves for lighthearted looks at contemporary
life.
Some of the most insightful come from Pulitzer Prize-winning
satirist Art Buchwald in his new “We’ll Laugh Again.”
Buchwald begins his collection of essays about the past decade
with recollections of Sept. 11. Continuing with commentary about past
and present presidents, downsizing, dot-coms, HMOs and Viagra, one of
America’s most lauded humorists reminds us that we can have fun with
the headlines, even if they incite headaches and worse.
The title is adapted from a more bleak remark that columnist Mary
McGrory made to Pat Moynihan after President Kennedy was shot.
For more barbed diatribes aimed at the powers that be, look to
popular commentator Michael Moore, who skewers the 2000 election and
everyone involved in it in his best-selling “Stupid White Men ... and
Other Sorry Excuses for the State of the Nation!” Delivered with
irreverent humor, the critique of American society has plenty of
shameless slurs that may satisfy or infuriate depending on which side
of center you’re on.
Less political types may be more intrigued by the inner life of
girls, dates, brides, wives and mothers -- the focus of Gwen Macsa’s
“Lipshtick.” With perceptive observations about everything from
junior high dances to chin hairs, bad boys and sagging breasts, the
National Public Radio commentator offers a hilarious look at the
rites and wrongs of womanhood.
Jewish mom Jennifer Moses has tongue firmly planted in cheek when
she looks at some of life’s most harrowing trials in “Food and
Whine.” In a quirky memoir documenting the year in which her twins
were born, her mother was diagnosed with cancer and her husband
changed careers, the Erma Bombeck for the new generation captures the
comic underbelly of modern family life.
Finally, if you’re looking for the first truly indispensable book
of the new millennium, check out Al Franken’s new “Oh, the Things I
Know!”
In what he describes as “a guide to success, or, failing that,
happiness,” the Emmy Award-winning TV star takes readers on a journey
from first job to senior citizenship. Promising to lighten everyone’s
burden with wisdom about parents, bosses, spouses and children,
Franken serves up a perfect gift for students of life, no matter what
their age or where they are in the growing up process.
* “CHECK IT OUT” is written by the staff of the Newport Beach
Public Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams, in
collaboration with June Pilsitz. All titles may be reserved by
accessing the catalog at www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
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