Review
"Hey, Joe" is probably one of the best books on Manila to come out of late. --
The Daily Tribune, May 7, 2000"Hey, Joe" tackles the mundane, bizarre, amusing, macabre, and maddening aspects about life in Manila. --
The Manila Times, March 31, 2000"Lerner seems to be equipped with extra-sensitive senses and an acute power of observation that makes for very entertaining and articulate writing...." --
Manila Times... Lerners humor easily shines through, making this anthology a must read not only for expats but also for Filipinos ... --
Manila Bulletin, May 13, 2000But amid the laughter, you also feel a knife on the side sometimes as you read. --
Malaya, March 20, 2000Lerner combines his keen talent for observation with the literary descriptive skill of his fellow countryman, the late John Steinbeck. --
The Foreign Post, March 16, 2000The book fascinated me and had me hooked.... --
Malaya Newspaper
Product Description
Hey, Joe, you like snake?
Hey, Joe, welcome to Tondo!
Hey, Joe, whats your name?
Hey, Joe. Its the phrase that greets every foreign guy in the Philippines on a daily basis. And perhaps nobody personifies the meaning of this moniker better than Ted Lerner, an American whose popular, freewheeling column, Hey, Joe, appears weekly in Manilas BusinessWorld newspaper. Here, in his new book, aptly entitled Hey, Joe, with the subtitle, a slice of the city -- an American in Manila, Ted presents a collection of his best Manila stories, a kaleidoscope of funny and bizarre incidents, offbeat characters and keen observations dished up by a wide-eyed foreigner living in a city exploding with life, unfathomable urban chaos and a story around every corner. Readers will hitch a ride with the author and spend a night at the cock fights -- the Philippines violent and gentlemanly national pastime. Walk through bustling, colorful markets that turn the senses on full blast. Experience the harrowing thrill of riding a bicycle through some of the worlds worst and wildest traffic. Visit a secretive girlie bar reserved mainly for foreigners. Enjoy the party-like atmosphere in the cemetery of one of the worlds most unique observances of the dead. Lounge in the authors very own urban nipa hut. Hang out with the rather laid back and care free folks on Manilas lively and teeming streets. Simple daily living also provides material for fascinating and humorous reading. From his run ins with mangy Filipino mutts, to everyone asking him Wheres my Christmas?, to the characters who peddle every product under the sun through his neighborhood, the author captures perfectly the ups and downs of everyday life experienced by the foreigner living in one of the worlds largest and most chaotic cities. In all, the 33 short stories in Hey, Joe paint a multi-colored portrait of this imposing Asian metropolis, a third world, urban travel adventure as told not only through the foreigners eyes, but also through his ears, nose, fingers and mouth. Indeed, like the city he lives and writes in, Ted Lerners Hey, Joe, is a full body experience.
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