Accustomed as I am: The Loneliness of the Long-distance Speaker (Prion Humour Classics)

Accustomed as I am: The Loneliness of the Long-distance Speaker (Prion Humour Classics)

by Basil Boothroyd (Author)

Synopsis

Basil Boothroyd takes the reader on a comic journey through an era when the likes of the Women's Institute and the Rotary Club were still the social hubs of the nation and needed a steady stream of guest speakers to keep their members entertained. "Accustomed As I Am" is an intimate portrait and sometime surreal travelogue of his own grim and terrifying experiences on the public speakers' circuit in the wilds of Little England. Addressing everyone from Park Lane black-tie shindigs for corporate clients to the inmates of Pentonville prison and the Edgware Young Women's Mizrachi Society, he is asked to entertain on every subject from the Life-Cycle of the Beaver (with slides) to Transport Through the Ages. While masquerading as a How-to-Book, Boothroyd wilfully loses us in a confusion of slapstick asides and self-effacing comic digressions as he unsuccessfully attempts to navigate the pitfalls of a thankless profession. It's a sordid tale of dingy hotels, bad transport, self-doubts, hecklers, drunks, technical difficulties, misjudged audiences and unsuitable material - instantly and painfully recognizable to anyone who has ever had to sit through a speech or make one themselves.

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 138
Edition: New edition
Publisher: Prion Books Ltd
Published: 12 Jul 2001

ISBN 10: 1853754544
ISBN 13: 9781853754548

Media Reviews
the finest comic writer we have PG Wodehouse a man of unusual talent... a wonderful eye for the revealing comic detail... his writing had at times a Faberge glitter. RGG Price
Author Bio
Basil Boothroyd was one of the most celebrated Punch writers of the 20th century. He first contributed in 1938 and was assistant editor from 1952-1970. He was equally wellknown for his BBC broadcasts and became a much requested public-speaker on both sides of the Atlantic. He published a number of books including three volumes of his radio talks and five volumes of his Punch articles. He produced much of his writing from a hut in his Sussex garden.