|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
24 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Like a cold glass of Tab on a hot summer afternoon!,
By WRG "Webstercat" (California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Attack of the Theater People (Paperback)
Okay, I admit that since discovering Marc's work when a copy of his marvelous first novel, "How I Paid for College" floated past me, I have become a fan. I've learned over the years, that some folks need their literature grounded firmly in the real world, and I suppose this book is not for them. For those of us who can't help but twirl our umbrellas when caught in a storm, and like to trek to the top of the Empire State Building so that we can belt a few lines of "New York, New York...", this book is a gift. A hilarious tale of inspirations and espionage. A delightfully wacky roller-coaster of a novel which causes eruptions of laughter...nay, guffaws and cackles at almost every page. A book that gives us a break from the tedium and depressing sogginess of the daily news. I bought six and sent them to friends who need a bit of tonic. Until somebody invents Mulliner's-Buck-U-Uppo, we need to books like this to keep the divine silliness that is life in a proper perspective.
In short, it's pure comic gold!
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
WARNING: You May Break into Song Reading This Novel,
By
This review is from: Attack of the Theater People (Paperback)
Maybe you've heard Marc Acito on NPR. It's possible that you've even heard the guy sing; after all, he is both an opera tenor and "mental for Yentl." But most likely, you know Marc Acito from his first novel, How I Paid for College. As the blog entries above reveal, Marc has a bright wit, and this book amply reflects it.
Acito's novel relates the further adventures of Edward Zanni and his affiliated theater geeks. Having succeeded in their quest to get Edward into the Juilliard School, we now fast-forward to 1986, and Edward is sitting on his "jazz hands" after getting booted from the school of his dreams. What follows are a series of (dare I write it?) zany misadventures that together, resemble the plotline of a well-done musical comedy. That is, the characters do break into song periodically, and the results are actually funny. As this vehicle suggests, there's plenty of ba-ba-ba-bing zingers and, it being the 1980s, there is even an insider trading scandal. Good stuff. REALLY good stuff. Fun Fact: Marc was at a Chuck Palahniuk reading (Fight Club) when Palahniuk remembered reading Acito's byline on a humor column. He then recommended Acito to his literary agent, and a star was born... er, referred.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Acito Does It Again,
By
This review is from: Attack of the Theater People (Paperback)
Acito helps me recreate myself again with his sequal 'Attack of the Theater People.' Constantly on the edge of my seat, I kept telling myself I'd read "just one more chapter" until I finished the book less than two days after I'd gotten it.
Acito sparks the imagination in his book as he sends Edward Zanni back on another set of mind-boggling adventures using his theater skills as well as his best assets - his friends. Exciting, suspenseful, and at some points mildly erotic, Acito has done it again with a great hit. I can't wait to read the next in the series!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Hillariously over-the-top comedy of errors!,
By
This review is from: Attack of the Theater People (Paperback)
Edward Zanni is a gay 20 year old aspiring actor, who is thrown out of drama school for being ... well ... too dramatic. With his professor's advice to "experience life" for a year, then reapply, he takes a series of strange jobs, ranging from personal office assistant to a sadistic tyrant, to a host for preteen parties (masquerading as a Brit host of the UK's version of MTV, which doesn't exist), as an usher at a Broadway theatre, and as a party facilitator for fancy corporate events. In the context of that last one, Edward gets involved in an insider trading scandal, feeding overheard conversations about companies to a securities broker he develops a serious crush on.
Although Acito provides enough background info for this to stand on its own, this is essentially a sequel to his hilarious "How I Paid For College," and is best enjoyed if you read that other book first. Back are his colorful friends, including the conniving, nerdish Natie, the outgoing student thespian Kelly, and Edward's straight-but-not-narrow (and soooo hunky) crush, Doug (who is now headlining a Bruce Springsteen cover band.) Like that first book, "..Theatre People" is a delightfully "over the top" comedy of errors, involving the Shah of Iran, a 13 year old stalker, the SEC, a high speed chase across a Broadway stage, a politically charged staging of "The Music Man," posing as a dead man to rent an apartment, the wrath of Edward's insane stepmother, and a flamboyant wardrobe designer known as Hung (That's a name, not an adjective!) Suspend all normal channels of belief, and hang on for the ride! Five "jazz hands" (stars) out of five!
5.0 out of 5 stars
screamingly hilariously laugh-out-loud funny,
This review is from: Attack of the Theater People (Paperback)
This novel is a total delight. It is funny beyond belief. The narrative voice is one of the best ones ever. There are some of the most delicious puns I've ever read. The characters are memorable. The situations are delightful. I can't praise this novel enough. The more things worsen for Edward (our hero), the funnier it gets. If you need hundreds of laughs, this is the book to do it.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great book - Marc Please write another book:),
By JMP (Ohio) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Attack of the Theater People (Paperback)
"How I Paid for College" is one of my favorite books and I was realy excited when I saw Marc wrote another book. Like "How I Paid for College", this book was very good and entertaining.
I wish Marc would write another book.
5.0 out of 5 stars
The audio version makes it even better!,
By CPHope (West Bloomfield, MI United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Attack of the Theater People (Paperback)
I first "read" this book as well as "How I Paid for College" via audio book. The narration by Jeff Woodman (for this as well as the first) is absolutely incredible, with each character made separately distinct via the narration. I may have even enjoyed this book more than the first. Spectacular accompaniment for road trips!
5.0 out of 5 stars
Please, Sir, I want some more!,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Attack of the Theater People (Paperback)
When I read Marc Acito's first novel, How I Paid For College, I absolutely fell in love with his skill as a writer. His characters are amazingly real -- no matter how ludicrous the situations. Now, after reading Attack of the Theater People, I am convinced that two novels are absolutely not enough.
Please, Mr. Acito, let the adventures of theater nerds continue!
4.0 out of 5 stars
Attack of the Theater People,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Attack of the Theater People (Paperback)
Loved it almost as much as his first book (it's in my top 5 books of all time) The writer has an awesome sense of humour and it's a great read.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very enjoyable,
By
This review is from: Attack of the Theater People (Paperback)
VERY funny. I truly enjoyed this book and hope to read more from Marc Acito. While I was reading "Band Fags", I kept having flashes back to this book. Of the two books, "Attack of the Theater People" was the better book by far.
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
Attack of the Theater People by Marc Acito (Paperback - April 22, 2008)
$12.95 $11.01
In Stock | ||