The Bedwetter
Books | Biography & Autobiography / Entertainment & Performing Arts
3.4
(190)
Sarah Silverman
“Though Silverman’s book provides her customary shock-and-awe humor . . . it is [her] honesty and vulnerability that are most surprising.” —Los Angeles TimesFrom the outrageously filthy and oddly innocent comedienne and star of the powerful 2015 film I Smile Back comes a memoir—her first book—that is at once shockingly personal, surprisingly poignant, and still pee-in-your-pants funny. In this collection of humorous essays, Sarah Silverman tells tales of growing up Jewish in New Hampshire, losing her virginity, learning to curse at three years old, and being a bedwetter until she was old enough to drive, and in a surprisingly poignant piece, she recounts the accidental death of her infant brother. Of course, in her loopy, taboo-breaking way, she always manages somehow to leave you laughing. But then you’d expect nothing less from a woman who sang to her boyfriend on national television that she was “F***ing Matt Damon.”If you like Sarah’s television show The Sarah Silverman Program, or memoirs such as Chelsea Handler’s Are You There Vodka? It’s Me Chelsea and Artie Lange’s Too Fat to Fish, you’ll love The Bedwetter.“Deftly mixes the spit-take funny stuff with an unsentimental but enlightened look back at her not-so-charmed life and career.” —Vanity Fair“In this book, as onstage, she has the power to shock—not so easy in these times. Lenny Bruce and Richard Pryor crossed lines; now that the controversy has faded, we remember their genius. And so we will with Sarah Silverman.” —People“An engrossing (and grossing) journey from childhood to childish adulthood.” —Heeb Magazine
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More Details:
Author
Sarah Silverman
Pages
259
Publisher
Harper Collins
Published Date
2010-04-02
ISBN
0061987077 9780061987076
Community ReviewsSee all
"I have never watched her show or stand-up comedy but I decided to try her book. With the exception of the crude religious perversion (the afterword by "God"), and her stupid congratulatory ode of getting Obama elected as President, I thought the book was pretty funny. It was my dirty, frivolous read and it made me laugh...and I'm not entirely comfortable admitting that. I don't know if I could stomach her comedy but for some odd reason I am looking forward to another book by this self-proclaimed "retarded" Jew. I can't recommend this book to anyone, though, because I'm still not sure why I read it in the first place. I wasn't under the influence of anything or anyone, I was just exercising the belief that it's okay to try almost anything at least once."
"Hilarious and just what you’d want/expect from Sarah.
Not for the easily offended. "
A k
Allison krieg
"There are times this book is really funny, and I applaud Silverman for being so upfront about her struggles with depression when she was younger. However, there are also times when she tells stories about jokes that she made that some people found offensive, and she tries to defend those jokes, and I'm not sure the jokes are defensible. I'm also not sure if they're funny, and as much as I admire her for standing up for what she believes in, I'm not sure she completely understands why some people might be offended by these jokes."