The Sunday Times - UK (2021-11-28)

(EriveltonMoraes) #1

HUMOUR


A Carnival of Snackery
Diaries 2003-2020
by David Sedaris
Little, Brown £20

The second instalment from
the American humourist who
has a Sussex rubbish truck
named after him covers a
great sweep of recent history,
but it is the minutiae rather
than the big/depressing
events that make him such
pleasing company. An entry,
for example, on the revelation
that spiders (“if they felt like
it”) could devour everyone on
Earth in a year ends with him
wondering how a spider feels
when it’s rescued from a bath.
Grateful or dismissive? These
are the important questions.

What Is Your Problem?
by Jack Dee
Quercus £20

During lockdown, comedy’s
“little ray of sleet” retrained
as a psychotherapist. Or
rather he took a three-hour
online course with the Ruislip
Institute of Advansed Learning
(sic) and then took to Twitter
to “help” his “patients”. This
is the result — a compendium
of serious problems from his
followers (my sex life is awful/
I have no self-confidence/I’m
a shoplifter) and hilariously
unsympathetic solutions from
Dee. A timely resurgence of
the pull-yourself-together
school of therapy.

Theroux the Keyhole
Diaries of a Grounded
Documentary Maker
by Louis Theroux
Macmillan £20

Theroux has spent his career
exploring the weird fringes of
civilisation, hanging out with
survivalists, swingers and Neil
and Christine Hamilton. But
like the rest of us he spent last
year hanging out at home
with his new friends: alcohol

moving blend of history
and travelogue Egremont
explores the overlooked little
countries of Estonia and
Latvia, caught for centuries
between the rival
powerhouses of Sweden,
Germany and Russia. Weaving
between past and present,
he uncovers vanished Baltic
baronies and abandoned
manor houses, nationalist
poets and Teutonic knights,
buried secrets and devastating
atrocities. Above all he evokes
a very particular mood:
a blend of guilt, sadness,
melancholy and nostalgia,
hanging like a fog over the
Baltic forests. c

elusive. With painstaking


research and imaginative


sympathy, Hutton recreates


his world from the ground up.


Starting in the fields of East


Anglia, he follows Cromwell to


the House of Commons and


battlefields of the Civil War,


teasing out the tensions


between his deep religious


faith and political ambition.


A landmark biography and


model of historical scholarship.


The Glass Wall


Lives on the Baltic Frontier


by Max Egremont


Picador £25


In this haunting, often very


Watching Neighbours
Twice a Day
How ‘90s TV (Almost)
Prepared Me for Life
by Josh Widdicombe
Bonnier £20

The idea that television
defines your childhood may
no longer be true (thanks,
the internet) but for Nineties
kid and comedian Josh
Widdicombe, who grew up in
the middle of Dartmoor, his
portal to the outside world
was the box. This half-
memoir, half-cultural history
is a light and engaging read,
but it’s also a reminder of how
quickly time marches on. The
truth is out there. Blobby
blobby blobby. Gladiators,
ready! Aha! If any of that
means anything to you, you’ll
love it.

Official Sir Cliff Richard
2022 Calendar
£9.99

Is a calendar a book? Not
technically, but I’m making an
exception for this magnificent
tour de fromage. January and
Sir Cliff, 81, is grinning in a
stairwell. By May he’s rowing
alone across a lake, and by
August he’s in a pool drinking,
I think, orange squash. A
harsher critic may note that
the smile wanes as the year
progresses. By December it’s
more resigned grimace by a
log-burner. But isn’t that how
we all feel? c

Game for a laugh


Columnist Matt Rudd picks the comedians and entertainers


who’ve made him giggle most (not forgetting Cliff Richard)


Potting stars Bob Mortimer
with fellow comic Vic Reeves

and Joe Wicks. Is it too soon
to be reminded of that
locked-down year? I found it
strangely therapeutic. It
shows, like much of his work,
that we are more alike than
we are different.

And Away...
by Bob
Mortimer
Simon &
Schuster
£20

National treasure status has
been conferred on the
Middlesbrough-born
comedian thanks to show-
stealing performances on
Would I Lie to You? and his
terrible balance and pocket
meat on Gone Fishing.
Alternating between his
recovery from heart surgery
in 2015 and the traumas of
his childhood — his father’s
sudden death, his crippling
shyness, his depression —
this memoir sounds grim.
How, then, can it be the
most life-affirming, joyful
read of the year? Worth it
alone for the nickname of
his big-headed team-mate
(the Sniper’s Dream) and
his limping headmaster
(the Sniper’s Nightmare).

OUR BOOK


OF THE YEAR


BRENDAN O’SULLIVAN/SHUTTERSTOCK

28 November 2021 35

Free download pdf