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By Robert
Klein
Biography & Autobiography, Personal Memoirs, Entertainment, Humor
Touchstone Books
Hardcover, 384 pages, Illustrated, Maps
June
2005
$24.95
0684854880
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Dear Reader,
When we asked the beloved award-winning comedian and actor
Robert Klein to write a book, you can imagine our utter surprise
when he told us that he wanted to write about sixth-century
Chinese pottery. Thankfully, he hit a creative brick wall
(since he doesn't really know anything about pottery from
China or anywhere else). Then came similar failures to write
books about sea turtles, circumnavigation of the globe, building
jet engines at home, the sociology of chickens, or fungi of
the skin.
Luckily, Mr. Klein's paramount concern
was the consumer. He knew that if we, his publishers, were
going to boldly ask you to purchase his book (see above for
price), he would have to write something so good, so worthwhile,
so meaningful as to make you want to send additional money
to your bookseller in gratitude for having allowed you to
partake in this reading experience.
So Mr. Klein set out to write about what
he knows best: himself. This book is about the adventures
of a child who becomes a young man: how he thinks and dreams
and lusts and fears and laughs and handles adversity.
From the beginning of his distinguished
career as a comedian, Robert Klein established himself as
a pioneer in observational humor and razor-sharp routines
that are infectiously funny. Now -- for the first time --
Klein brings his trademark humor and honesty to the printed
page. In this portrait of a comic as a young man, Klein takes
us back to the people and streets of his Bronx neighborhood,
the eccentric cast of characters in the Catskills hotels and
bungalow colonies where he worked, the college dorms where
he received more than an academic education, the 1964 World's
Fair where he fell in love, New York City and Chicago in the
1960s as he developed his talent, and Los Angeles just as
he was about to embark on a show business career. Throughout,
Klein reveals the hilarity of growing up and explores the
mysteries and his own foibles in sex and relationships. He
recounts with wit and poignancy losing his virginity with
a prostitute, bringing home a German girlfriend to his Jewish
family, and the amorous adventures of the busboy he once was.
With an ego more fragile than Chinese
pottery, Robert Klein has written a funny and evocative coming-of-age
memoir—well worth the price (if we say so ourselves).
Enjoy.
All the best,
The Publisher
For more than forty years Robert Klein
has entertained audiences. He has had an acclaimed career
in comedy, on Broadway, on television, and in film. Born in
the Bronx, he was a member of the famed Second City theatrical
troupe in Chicago in the 1960s. Twice he was nominated for
the Grammy Award for Best Comedy Album of the Year: Child
of the Fifties (1973) and Mind Over Matter (1974).
He received a Tony Award nomination for Best Actor and won
a Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award for his performance
in the hit Neil Simon musical They're Playing Our Song
in 1979. In 1993, Klein won an Obie and the Outer Critics
Circle Award for Outstanding Performance by an Actor in Wendy
Wasserstein's The Sisters Rosensweig. In 1975, Klein
was the first comedian to appear in a live concert on Home
Box Office. He has done seven one-man shows for HBO. He was
a star of the hit NBC series Sisters and has made more
than 100 appearances on The Tonight Show and The
Late Show with David Letterman. Notable films include
Hooper, The Owl and the Pussycat, Two Weeks Notice,
and How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days. |