So, as expected, Lunatics is funny, at times laugh-out-loud hilarious. The story begins with Philip Horkman calling Jeffrey Peckerman's daughter offside at a youth soccer game. A chance meeting the next day and a snowballing sequence of misunderstandings, coincidences, and luck take Horkman and Peckerman on a journey that includes becoming wanted terrorists, traveling on a clothing optional cruise, overthrowing Castro, feeding starving refugees, bringing peace to the Middle East and democracy to China, and running against each other for President. Along the way they become the most famous and revered figures in the world.
Barry and Zwiebel |
I enjoyed Lunatics, because I love Dave Barry and his silly, stupid humor. However, if all I read was his novels, I'm not sure how impressed I would be. His non-fiction books and columns are brilliant, classic, hilarious, and can be read over and over. Lunatics, not so much.
Dave Berry is my kind of guy. I enjoy his wring as well. It sounds like a very funny book. I will read it eventually.
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