Modern Manners (Paladin Books)

by P.J. O'Rourke

Paperback, 1993

Status

Available

Call number

818.5402

Publication

HarperCollins Publishers Ltd (1993), Paperback, 256 pages

Description

Essays. Reference. Nonfiction. Humor (Nonfiction.) HTML:An "extremely funny" take on the decline of civility, from the #1 New York Times�bestselling author of How the Hell Did This Happen? (The Plain Dealer). In Modern Manners, cultural guru P. J. O'Rourke provides the essential accessory for the truly contemporary man or woman�a rulebook for living in a world without rules. Traditionally, good manners were a means of becoming as bland and invisible as everyone else, thus avoiding calling attention to one's own awkwardness and stupidity. Today, with everyone wanting to appear special, stupidity is at a premium, and manners�as outrageous and bizarre as possible�are a wonderful way to distinguish ourselves, or at least have a fine time trying. This irreverent and hilarious guide to anti-etiquette offers pointed advice on topics from sex and entertaining to reading habits and death. With the most up-to-date forms of vulgarity, churlishness, and presumption, the latest fashions in discourtesy and barbarous display, O'Rourke is our guide to the art of incivility. "Modern Manners is O'Rourke doing what he has always done: making hilarious, insightful, often vicious fun of the world and all its inhabitants." �People "A reader who rushes through [Modern Manners] from cover to cover�like I did�will feel like a child who has gorged on chocolate cake: happy, but a bit disappointed that it's all gone. The reason O'Rourke's book is so successful, however, is not just his great sense of humor. O'Rourke's writing has a cutting edge behind it, which makes a reader's laughter just a bit thought-provoking, and just a bit rueful . . . Very funny." �Chicago Tribune.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member branful
could be funny, if you are young and in high spirits. i found it sufficiently funny 20 years ago.
LibraryThing member ritaer
This might have been funny the first time around, but it does not stand up to rereading as some of O'Rourke's work does.
LibraryThing member dmcolon
I loved this book. It's got that off-the-cuff snarkiness that can make O'Rourke a genius. It's over the top funny and worth a read. The part where he makes up interesting family histories still makes me laugh.

Subjects

Language

Original publication date

1983

Physical description

256 p.; 7.72 inches

ISBN

0586087885 / 9780586087886
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