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Book Reviews of Boogers Are My Beat : More Lies, but Some Actual Journalism

Boogers Are My Beat : More Lies, but Some Actual Journalism
Boogers Are My Beat More Lies but Some Actual Journalism
Author: Dave Barry
ISBN-13: 9781400047574
ISBN-10: 1400047579
Publication Date: 9/23/2003
Pages: 256
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 13

4 stars, based on 13 ratings
Publisher: Crown
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

2 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

txladyrah avatar reviewed Boogers Are My Beat : More Lies, but Some Actual Journalism on + 180 more book reviews
The New York Times calls Barry "the funniest man in America". Barry has won the Pulitzer Prise, and his columns are syndicated in more than 500 newspapers.
jjares avatar reviewed Boogers Are My Beat : More Lies, but Some Actual Journalism on + 3413 more book reviews
With a title like this, it has to be Dave Barry, that irreverent scion of humorous journalism. Can you believe it? The powers-that-be allowed Barry to shadow the 2000 Presidential Conventions and election. If that weren't bad enough, they allowed him to report on the Olympics. The Olympic Committee will probably never let Dave Barry near any of the contests again.

After Barry made mincemeat of the most famous races in the world and blew off the 2000 election season, he was off to more manly subjects: humvees, chain saws and appliances smarter than Dave Barry (most of them already are but there are more frightening ones on the horizon). Then North Dakota comes within Dave's 20-20 eyesight and he ridicules the population (of 15) so mercilessly that the state wants to drop the 'North' so folks think it is warmer than the state formerly-known-as North Dakota. To pay him back, the state names a sewage lifter after the famous pundit.

But the thing that shocked me the most was the addition of the last two chapters. They are the two articles Dave Barry wrote after 9/11/2001. The man can write eloquent prose about serious subjects. Both are memorable but the thought behind 'Hallowed Ground' was particularly poignant.