
Looking Blackwards
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Narrated by:
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Jeffrey Kafer
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By:
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Arthur Black
About this listen
The best-selling author of A Chip Off the Old Black, Black is the New Green, and many more is black for another round of gut-busting stories and essays. This time round, Arthur Black turns his critical eye and warped funny bone to the world beyond Salt Spring Island, lambasting the amateur ballplayer who sued because the sun was in his eyes, the craze for blood sports and our anachronistic fetish for suits and ties.
Yet, compassion is in the air too, with Black rehabilitating one of the most ineffective US presidents, Jimmy Carter, into the greatest, and finding a shred of respect for Conrad Black (no relation), British lord, newspaper mogul, and jailbird. Then there was the time Black found himself sleeping in Corsica between a woman and her husband. Needless to say, it was...complicated.
©2012 Arthur Black (P)2013 Audible, Inc.Editorial reviews
Best-selling Canadian author Arthur Black (Chip Off the Old Black, Black is the New Green) displays his roaring wit and powers of observation once again with Looking Blackwards. Jeffrey Kafer gives a deft performance that highlights the sardonic nature of these captivating tales. Looking Blackwards touches on the majestic landscape of Salt Spring Island, and also delves into subjects such as US president Jimmy Carter, in vitro meat, giant hogweed, baseball, the death of the public payphone, and personal adventures in Corsica. It is a humorous mediation upon the trials, tribulations, and triumphs of modern life.
What listeners say about Looking Blackwards
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- Kindle Customer
- 08-14-24
Funny vignettes, but —
This book was probably a series of shorts for a newspaper. They are usually very funny, about things I wouldn’t even think to write about
HOWEVER
he’s funny until he gets to politics. Here, it’s very obvious that he’s a Liberal. He makes fun of politicians, but only if they are conservatives. He could find nothing funny about his fellow liberals or even Lefties. So listen to these parts knowing his bias.
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