
All eBooks
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Sure, I’ll Join Your Cult
$14.99$11.24 Add to cartNotes From Your Bookseller
Bamford puts herself on the frontline of her own existence — and, we are better off for it. If there’s anyone who can help us see the proverbial “lighter side of life”, it’s Maria Bamford as she’s seen the darker side. We fully believe life through a comedian’s eyes is a fascinating world to visit.
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Surrender, White People!
$13.99$10.49 Add to cartNotes From Your Bookseller
Aside from late-night TV where issues of race are often discussed in satirical terms, there aren’t many books doing the same thing, although D.L. Hughley has ventured down this path a couple of times. As a comedian, actor and host of a very popular radio show, Hughley is a master of biting humor with a large dose of reality. It makes for a compelling show, and in his new book, he has written a contract to white America as a path towards peace and understanding.
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I Am America (And So Can You!)
$4.99 Add to cartCongratulations—just by looking at this webpage, you became 25% more patriotic.
From Stephen Colbert, the host of television’s highest-rated punditry show The Colbert Report, comes the book to fill the other 23¬ø hours of your day. I Am America (And So Can You!) contains all of the opinions that Stephen doesn’t have time to shoehorn into his nightly broadcast.
Dictated directly into a microcassette recorder over a three-day weekend, this book contains Stephen’s most deeply held knee-jerk beliefs on The American Family, Race, Religion, Sex, Sports, and many more topics, conveniently arranged in chapter form.
Always controversial and outspoken, Stephen addresses why Hollywood is destroying America by inches, why evolution is a fraud, and why the elderly should be harnessed to millstones.
You may not agree with everything Stephen says, but at the very least, you’ll understand that your differing opinion is wrong.
I Am America (And So Can You!) showcases Stephen Colbert at his most eloquent and impassioned. He is an unrelenting fighter for the soul of America, and in this book he fights the good fight for the traditional values that have served this country so well for so long.
Please buy this book before you leave the store
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All by My Selves: Walter, Peanut, Achmed, and Me
$4.99 Add to cart“The most popular standup comic in the U.S.” –Time Whether he’s breathing life into Walter, an old curmudgeon; Peanut, an over-caffeinated purple maniac; or Achmed, a screaming, skeletal, dead terrorist, comedian and ventriloquist Jeff Dunham is the straight man to some of the wildest, funniest partners in show business.All By My Selves is the story of one pretty ordinary guy, one interesting hobby, one very understanding set of parents, and a long and winding road to becoming America’s favorite comedian. With wit, honesty, and lots of great show business detail, Dunham shares all the major moments in his journey to worldwide fame and success.
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My Lead Dog Was a Lesbian
$10.99$8.24 Add to cartThe Iditarod may be the only race that awards a prize for last place. But then how many people can even complete a course that ranges across 1,000 miles of Alaska’s ice fields, mountains, and canyons at temperatures that sometimes plunges to 100 degrees below zero? In conditions like these, anything can go wrong. For Brian Patrick O’Donoghue, nearly everything did. In My Lead Dog Was a Lesbian, his reporter and intrepid novice musher tells what happened when he entered the 1991 Iditarod, along with seventeen sled dogs with names like Harley, Screech, and Rainy, his sexually confused lead dog. O’Donoghue braved snowstorms and sickening wipeouts, endured the contempt of more experienced racers (one of whom was daft enough to use poodles), and rode herd of four-legged companions who would rather be fighting or having sex. It’s all here, narrated with self-deprecating wit, in a true story of heroism, cussedness and astonishing dumb luck.
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Let’s Be Less Stupid
$9.99$7.49 Add to cartFormer SNL writer and The New Yorker staffer Patty Marx employs the weapon she wields best–not that weapon; Patty believes in gun control. Instead, she uses her sharp-edged humor to tackle the most difficult facet of aging: the mind’s decline. From forgetting her brother-in-law’s name while he was wearing a nametag to hanging up the phone to look for her phone, Marx confesses to her failures, and not only to make you feel better about yourself. In Let’s Be Less Stupid Patty addresses troubling conundrums, such as: If there are more neural connections in your brain than stars in the Milky Way, why did you put the butter dish in your nightstand drawer? Patty’s quest to get smarter includes just about everything: learning Cherokee, popping pills (not the good kind), and listening to–who’s the guy who didn’t write dum de de dum but the other one?