Rabu, 30 Mei 2012

The Global War on Morris: A Novel, by Steve Israel

The Global War on Morris: A Novel, by Steve Israel

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The Global War on Morris: A Novel, by Steve Israel

The Global War on Morris: A Novel, by Steve Israel



The Global War on Morris: A Novel, by Steve Israel

Free Ebook PDF The Global War on Morris: A Novel, by Steve Israel

“Writing in the full-tilt style of Carl Hiaasen” (The Washington Post), this jaundiced political satire was ripped from the headlines and penned by an author who’s met the characters, heard the conversations, and seen the plot twists firsthand.Meet Morris Feldstein, a pharmaceutical salesman living and working in western Long Island who loves the Mets, loves his wife Rona, and loves things just the way they are. He doesn’t enjoy the news; he doesn’t like to argue. Rona may want to change the world; Morris wants the world to leave him alone. Morris does not make waves. But one day Morris is seduced by a lonely, lovesick receptionist at one of the offices along his sales route, and in a moment of weakness charges a non-business expense to his company credit card. No big deal. Easy mistake. But the government’s top-secret surveillance program, anchored by a giant, complex supercomputer known as NICK, thinks differently. NICK begins to thread together the connected strands of Morris’s life—his friends, family, his traffic violations, his daughter’s political leanings, his wife’s new patients, and even his failed romantic endeavors—and Morris becomes the government’s public enemy number one. In his “laugh-out-loud funny” (Chris Matthews) debut novel, author “Steve Israel reveals his inner Jon Stewart” (Daily News, New York). The Global War on Morris toes the line between recent breaking headlines and a future that is not that difficult to imagine: “Why read this when one can see Washington insiders acting like buffoons in farcical situation on CNN? This is funnier than Wolf Blitzer, that’s why” (Library Journal).

The Global War on Morris: A Novel, by Steve Israel

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #682644 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-11-10
  • Released on: 2015-11-10
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.37" h x .60" w x 5.50" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 304 pages
The Global War on Morris: A Novel, by Steve Israel

Review “If Joseph Heller had served in Congress instead of the Second World War, he might have written The Global War on Morris instead of Catch-22. Congressman Steve Israel's tale of how the war on terror sweeps up an unassuming salesman from Long Island is both darkly hilarious and hilariously dark. Somehow Israel has combined his access to top secret national security briefings with a finely tuned sense of the absurd as he skewers Washington bureaucrats, Machiavellian politicians, and a certain Darth Vader-like Vice President. On every page he displays a wicked wit and an irony that never descends into bitterness."— (Paul Begala)"If there's a writer currently serving in the U.S. House of Representatives funnier than Steve Israel, I have not been made aware of their work. The Global War on Morris is a great, smart, and funny read." (Paul Reiser)“I haven’t laughed so hard since I read my last novel. Steve Israel is as funny, witty, and satirical on paper as he is in person. He’s also a master of political insight and an accurate observer of Washington absurdities. The Global War on Morris is a bi-partisan skewer that will annoy both sides of the aisle. At a time when America could use a good laugh, Congressman Israel comes to the rescue. Fast and furious, fair and balanced. A great read!” (Nelson DeMille)“The Global War on Morris is a laugh-out-loud funny book. I don’t mean a chuckle here or there. This yarn by Congressman Steve Israel is downright hilarious. The NSA types in Washington, we discover, have picked up this unlikely pair with its state-of-the-art surveillance operation: Morris is a medical supplies salesman—a real nebbish guy—who can’t wait to get home to Long Island each night and catch the old black-and-white movies on Turner Classics. Hassan is a “sleeper cell” terrorist down in Miami waiting for his call-up, and with it that dreamy reward of 72 virgins. Guess which of these two the US government has marked as the country’s number-one security threat? But the greatest surprise in The Global War on Morris is how a US congressman can be such a world-class satirist. Steve Israel is right up there with Tom Wolfe and Christopher Buckley, and, believe me, that’s as great as it gets. This first book of Steve Israel’s is a race between laughter and absurdity with you as the referee.” (Chris Matthews)"This very funny political satire, set in 2004, reads like it could have sprung from the keyboard of Christopher Buckley.... As political satires go, it's really good; as debut novels go, it's even better." (Booklist)"I was laughing out loud." (Dana Bash, CNN)"[I]t’s an unexpected delight to find “The Global War on Morris,” a political satire by Rep. Steve Israel (D-N.Y.), so spirited and funny... writing in the full-tilt style of Carl Hiaasen, Israel... skewer[s] his way through one gaffe after another in the fight against domestic terrorism. Imagine 'It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World' with a soupcon of al-Qaeda."" (Ron Charles The Washington Post)"Rep. Steve Israel reveals his inner Jon Stewart in his debut novel....The book amounts to a critique of what Israel deems the overreaching of the Bush-Cheney efforts." (New York Daily News)“Hilarity and broad satire of the bureaucracy ensue….Why read this when one can see Washington insiders acting like buffoons in farcical situation on CNN? This is funnier than Wolf Blitzer, that’s why.” (Library Journal)“Brandishing biting wit and a Washington insider's perspective, U.S. Congressman Steve Israel (New York) takes aim at the United States' global war on terror--revealing true casualties--in his hilariously shrewd first novel…. Israel's wicked sense of humor highlights the absurdity of his subject matter….Readers will doubtlessly find analogs to Israel's exaggerated characters among their coworkers, neighbors, maybe even family.” (Shelf Awareness)“Israel’s tongue muscles still must be hurting. After all, he had his tongue firmly planted deeply in his cheek for virtually every sentence through this 289-page romp. This is pure satire, biting sarcasm filled with laugh-out-loud digs at Cheney and his crew, overstuffed federal bureaucracies, headline-grabbing politicians, the excesses of the war on terrorism and even America-spoiled sleeper-cell terrorists.” (Buffalo News)

About the Author Congressman Steve Israel was sworn into office in 2001 and serves in the House Leadership as head of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee since 2010.  He represents New York’s third Congressional District, including the communities of Huntington, North Hempstead, Queens, Oyster Bay, and Smithtown. Born and raised in Brooklyn and on Long Island, Israel graduated from George Washington University.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. The Global War on Morris TSURIS AHEAD SUNDAY, AUGUST 1, 2004 tsu·ris n.—1. Trouble or woe; aggravation. Tsuris ahead. That’s what Morris Feldstein, a man who spent his entire life avoiding anxiety, danger, or tsuris, thought as he sat in his dining room. He was chewing on Kung Pao chicken from the Great Neck Mandarin Gourmet Takeout. His wife, Rona, had just asked him a question. “Morris. Do you plan on watching the Mets game tonight?” He mumbled: “I was planning to. Unless you want to watch something else. Benson is pitching. The Mets just got him. They’re playing the Braves.” And now, as Rona considered his response, Morris detected the possibility of tsuris. He resumed chewing, avoiding any eye contact with Rona, and hoping that the only sound in the Feldstein dining room would be the Kung Pao shifting between his cheeks. He hoped Rona would accept his answer with a silent affirmation, rather than the clucking of her tongue against her teeth, the drumming of her fiery-red fingernails against the table, or that sigh. God had implanted what Morris called Rona’s “guilt pipes” deep within her. The sounds of tsuris, like the wail of a tornado warning, the stirring of a police siren, or a wave drawing back on itself before breaking in white foam. The dining room was lit by a crystal chandelier purchased at Fortunoff department store when the Feldsteins moved to 19 Soundview Avenue many years before. Faded photographs smiled from the walls, distant memories of what Morris used to call “Feldstein family fun!” Back when the Feldstein family was fun. The pastel suits and flowing gowns and voluminous hair at Jeffrey’s bar mitzvah and Caryn’s bat mitzvah. The trip to Disney World when Rona summoned a weary smile for the camera even though “you could plotz from this heat.” The weekend upstate at Lake George when Rona refused to go into the lake because “I don’t swim where living creatures swim and God only knows what diseases you can catch in there.” Morris ate, watching the steam rising above the white cartons from the Chinese restaurant. The next moments would define the rest of Morris’s evening. Silence would mean Rona had accepted his response, and that he was free to finish dinner, sit in his RoyaLounger 8000, and watch the Mets. Anything other than silence meant certain tsuris. “Okay,” whispered Rona. “That’s fine. I guess.” Fine, I guess, in Rona-speak meant that things were anything but fine. “Well, did you—” Morris stammered. “Did I—” Rona replied. “I mean, do you want to watch something else?” “Me? No. Why would you ask that?” “I mean, if you want to watch something else—” “Look,” Rona said, her voice beginning to quiver. “So I’ll miss Wolf Blitzer tonight. A CNN special on the War on Terror. I’ll watch him another time. No biggie. It’s just the War on Terror.” Morris lifted his head and locked his eyes on his wife. She pushed her food around her plate while resting her chin on one hand. Her red hair was cropped, thanks to her weekly appointments at Spa Daniella, which Rona liked to call “my sanctuary.” Even at fifty-seven, she had retained the qualities of youth that attracted Morris to her so many years before: the glimmering green eyes over a high ridge of cheeks, the protruding lips, a slender frame that time and two pregnancies seemed to ignore. That was the amazing thing about Rona, he thought. Everything about her resisted time itself. She used passion and guilt like gravity—the heavy force that kept everything together, including their marriage. Three months after their wedding, in 1980, Rona asked Morris to attend a rally to protest the Soviet invasion of a place called Afghanistan. Morris didn’t even know where Afghanistan was. Or why the Russians invaded it. But Rona’s concern for people they had never met and a place they never knew attracted Morris to her. It was at that protest that Morris realized what he now remembered thirty-four years later. Someone had to do those unpleasant things that Morris hated about life: asking strangers for directions, arguing with sales clerks, protesting invasions of foreign countries. That was Rona! Morris Feldstein’s wife. For thirty-four years. “If you want to watch CNN, we’ll watch CNN,” Morris said. “No, no, no. God forbid you should miss the Mets tonight, Morris. And, by the way, you’re not eating your spareribs. What’s the matter with them?” “The spareribs are fine, Rona. We’ll watch Wolf Blitzer. It’s settled.” “Are you saying you want to watch CNN, Morris? Or are you placating me?” “Yes, I want to watch CNN.” I do not want to watch Wolf Blitzer talking. I want to watch Kris Benson pitching. “I just think it’s important that we stay informed. With all that’s going on in the world. Everywhere you turn is mishagas!” “I agree.” Why get involved? What difference does it make? “Then, if you want to watch CNN, it’s fine by me. We’ll watch. Now tell me: What’s wrong with your spareribs? You haven’t even touched them. What’s wrong, Morris?” It had been the biggest dilemma of Morris’s day. A day that, until that moment, had gone just as smoothly as the day before, and the day before that, for fifty-seven consecutive years. If every day was a winding road, Morris was pretty much doing a tick under the speed limit in the right-hand lane of the longest, straightest, levelest stretch of unbroken pavement ever. Every weekday at eight-fifteen, he kissed Rona good-bye. And it was always the same kind of kiss, more habit than affection. His central nervous system sent a signal to his lips, his lips pursed, and his body lurched forward, there was an instant peck, followed by a mumbled exchange of “love you”-“love you too.” It wasn’t loveless. Just automatic. Then he worked his territory as a pharmaceutical sales representative for Celfex Pharmaceutical Laboratories Inc., doctor’s office to doctor’s office. From one exit of the Long Island Expressway to the other. Stocking samples, pecking out orders on his BlackBerry. Stocking more samples and pecking out more orders. Plying the North Shore communities of Long Island, dispensing blue and yellow and pink boxes in the enclaves of Long Island Sound. At about five thirty every night, Rona would hear the soft thud of the car door in the driveway, then Morris’s plodding footsteps against the brick walk, as if he were shuffling toward the electric chair. The two exchanged polite small talk over whatever Rona had ordered in for dinner that night. (Mondays usually meant the pastrami platter from The Noshery.) Morris would then descend into his so-called office; a partially finished basement adorned in 1970s’ brown mahogany paneling and faded orange shag carpeting. There, he worked at a wooden and wobbly junior desk, doing the day’s paperwork and tapping at his computer, in a room he shared with piles of clothing in various stages of laundering and a sadly drooping Ping-Pong table last used when their youngest child, Caryn, was in junior high school. Later, he would return upstairs, sink into his RoyaLounger 8000, and raise his arms with the scepter that the king of every suburban castle wielded: his television clicker. If it wasn’t a Mets game, it was Turner Classic Movies. Morris felt safe in the comfort and the distance of black and white. At about eleven each night Rona tapped him on the shoulder and reprimanded him: “Morris, you fell asleep!” Which was the last thing he would hear from her until the next morning. Morris Feldstein’s entire life was tucked in the safe confines of anonymity. If Morris clung to any life philosophy, it was “Don’t make waves.” Whenever Rona wanted to return a purchase to Saks or Nieman Marcus, Morris would cringe and ask, “Why make waves?” then wait in the car while she made the return. When he and Rona flew somewhere on vacation, Morris wouldn’t recline in his seat. That would make a wave for the person behind him. One night, when Caryn was in high school, she proclaimed at the dinner table that she was going to be a documentary filmmaker “to expose injustice and inhumanity.” Morris chewed his veal Parmesan from Mario’s Takeout Gourmet and deliberated. He wanted to watch movies to escape the world. Caryn wanted to make movies to change the world. But Morris knew the only way to change the world was by pressing the TV remote: channel up or channel down. He didn’t raise his objections with Caryn. That, too, would be making waves. Morris Feldstein was so averse to making waves that he demurred when the leaders of the Temple Beth Torah synagogue of Great Neck asked him to become president of the Men’s Club. When they suggested instead that he accept the vice presidency, he declined again. After two weeks of prodding, Morris agreed to the position of second vice president, and then only for two reasons. First, because the second vice presidency of Temple Beth Torah of Great Neck seemed like a pretty good place not to be noticed. And second, he didn’t want to make waves with the synagogue leaders who continued their appeals. Morris sat in the RoyaLounger 8000, viewing CNN with detached interest. It was 2004 but it could have been any year since the War on Terror was proclaimed. The same rolling crescendo of music, the unmistakable voice of James Earl Jones heralding to CNN viewers who may have forgotten that “Thisssss . . . is CNN.” Then Wolf Blitzer broke the day’s news: the Attorney General of the United States announcing the discovery of a terrorist plot that revealed “critical intelligence in the War on Terror.” And after that pronouncement, Blitzer reported that “Administration sources have told CNN that the Department of Homeland Security may—may—raise the threat alert tomorrow for unnamed financial institutions in Washington and New York. Those sources cite intelligence reports suggesting a possible—possible—al-Qaeda attack. CNN is watching this story closely. And will report on it as it unfolds. Right here. On CNN.” There was also increased fighting by a radical cleric in Iraq whose name Morris couldn’t pronounce. And President Bush was expected to urge Congress to create two new intelligence agencies with acronyms Morris would never remember, because, evidently, the current alphabet soup of federal agencies wasn’t up to the task of protecting the homeland. And with that rosy recap of the day, Wolf Blitzer promised to “be right back” after some commercials about depression medications. Not a word about the Mets. Or their new pitcher, Kris Benson, who had just arrived in a dubious trade, thought Morris. Then it got worse. During the commercial, Rona asked: “Now, isn’t this better than a baseball game?” Morris couldn’t understand why anyone would frighten themselves by watching the news, when the worst thing that happened in a Mets game was the relief pitching. “Yes, Rona.” “I wish you would pay more attention to what’s happening in the world, Morris.” This was the difference between Morris and Rona. Rona wanted to change the world. Morris wanted the world to leave him alone. She read news magazines and subscribed to the New York Times and watched Wolf Blitzer. He was like the Public Access channel on cable television: there but rarely observed. In 2000 she had planted herself in front of the television for four straight nights watching them count ballots and peer at chads in Florida before the Supreme Court anointed George Bush the new President. And then clapped when their daughter, Caryn, announced that she was going to protest in front of the Supreme Court and bring her camera. She sent modest donations to the Nature Conservancy and occasionally attended meetings of Hadassah, and her eyes filled with tears whenever she watched the news about the genocide in Darfur. She believed she could make the world better, when, Morris knew, she could not. All watching the news did was to prove how unalterably miserable the world was. Why bother watching what you couldn’t change?


The Global War on Morris: A Novel, by Steve Israel

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31 of 31 people found the following review helpful. "Never send to know for whom the bell tolls; It tolls for thee...." John Donne [1572 - 1631] By Christopher J. O'shea Chillingly authentic. Read the book cover-to-cover over the past 24 hours, through all the laughter and tears. A cautionary and plausible tale, told with wit and verisimilitude.

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful. This is a book that is strikingly funny overall. But then as you stop laughing and ... By J. Hamby This is a book that is strikingly funny overall. But then as you stop laughing and think about it, it strikes you how close it hits home in authenticity. Disturbingly so. And then you might giggle again at the underlying humor that pervades alongside the hit you along side the head comedy. I'm not going to think too hard because otherwise I'll find myself picnic-ing on some grassy knoll hoping I have enough aluminum foil to wrap around my big head. I was leery of yet another inside attempt to portray our government warts and all. But Israel manages to deliver a wonderfully entertaining novel.

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful. I had to read this book and I'm glad I did By Madge Heard about this book on "Hardball". Chris Matthews had a hard time interviewing the author without laughing. I had to read this book and I'm glad I did! Bless the inventors of the Kindle! With a click of my finger, I entered the world of Morris Feldstein! Yes I laughed out loud through out the book, beginning with the dedication: "To former vice president Dick Cheney. And to my dad, who didn't particularly care for him." I know the feeling. It's a funny, thought provoking and yes, scary book and sooooo entertaining! Couldn't put it down and a little sad that it's over.

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The Global War on Morris: A Novel, by Steve Israel

The Global War on Morris: A Novel, by Steve Israel

The Global War on Morris: A Novel, by Steve Israel
The Global War on Morris: A Novel, by Steve Israel

Selasa, 29 Mei 2012

An Introduction to Psychological Tests and Scales, by Kate Loewenthal, Christopher Alan Lewis

An Introduction to Psychological Tests and Scales, by Kate Loewenthal, Christopher Alan Lewis

After downloading and install the soft file of this An Introduction To Psychological Tests And Scales, By Kate Loewenthal, Christopher Alan Lewis, you could start to review it. Yeah, this is so satisfying while somebody needs to review by taking their huge publications; you remain in your new way by just manage your device. Or perhaps you are operating in the office; you can still make use of the computer to check out An Introduction To Psychological Tests And Scales, By Kate Loewenthal, Christopher Alan Lewis completely. Obviously, it will certainly not obligate you to take lots of pages. Simply web page by page depending on the moment that you need to read An Introduction To Psychological Tests And Scales, By Kate Loewenthal, Christopher Alan Lewis

An Introduction to Psychological Tests and Scales, by Kate Loewenthal, Christopher Alan Lewis

An Introduction to Psychological Tests and Scales, by Kate Loewenthal, Christopher Alan Lewis



An Introduction to Psychological Tests and Scales, by Kate Loewenthal, Christopher Alan Lewis

Download PDF Ebook An Introduction to Psychological Tests and Scales, by Kate Loewenthal, Christopher Alan Lewis

In its first edition this book successfully enabled readers, with little or no prior knowledge of computing or statistics, to develop reliable and valid tests and scales for assessment or research purposes. In this edition, the author has thoroughly updated the text to include new recent advances in computer software and provide information on relevant internet resources. The book contains detailed guidelines for locating and constructing psychological measures, including descriptions of popular psychological measures and step-by-step instructions for composing a measure, entering data and computing reliability and validity of test results. Advanced techniques such as factor analysis, analysis of covariance and multiple regression analysis are presented for the beginner.An Introduction to Psychological Tests and Scales provides a clear, concise and jargon-free primer for all those embarking in fieldwork or research analysis. It will be an invaluable tool for undergraduates and postgraduates in psychology and a useful text for students and professionals in related disciplines.

An Introduction to Psychological Tests and Scales, by Kate Loewenthal, Christopher Alan Lewis

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2568619 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-11-30
  • Released on: 2015-11-30
  • Format: Kindle eBook
An Introduction to Psychological Tests and Scales, by Kate Loewenthal, Christopher Alan Lewis


An Introduction to Psychological Tests and Scales, by Kate Loewenthal, Christopher Alan Lewis

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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Small, pithy gem By Dr. I. Luvboox Kate Loewenthal has written an exceptional book. Clearly worded, succinct and yet pleasant to read. I love this book, refer to it often and recommended it to my trainees and colleagues. If you have questions about how to develop a scale, how to evaluate an item for reliability, want to know more about validity, buy this book.

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An Introduction to Psychological Tests and Scales, by Kate Loewenthal, Christopher Alan Lewis

An Introduction to Psychological Tests and Scales, by Kate Loewenthal, Christopher Alan Lewis

An Introduction to Psychological Tests and Scales, by Kate Loewenthal, Christopher Alan Lewis
An Introduction to Psychological Tests and Scales, by Kate Loewenthal, Christopher Alan Lewis

Minggu, 27 Mei 2012

DC Trip, by Sara Benincasa

DC Trip, by Sara Benincasa

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DC Trip, by Sara Benincasa

DC Trip, by Sara Benincasa



DC Trip, by Sara Benincasa

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Alicia Deats is a new teacher chaperoning her very first high school trip to Washington DC, and nothing could be more terrifying than a class full of horny, backstabbing, boundary-pushing teenagers under her watch. To make matters worse, she embarrassed herself with her co-chaperone Bryan Kenner with one too many margaritas and an ill-placed vomiting incident at last year’s teacher mixer and is hoping this trip can be a fresh start for them.

Alicia believes in positive reinforcement and trust to keep her students out of trouble, but best friend high school sophomores Gertie, Sivan, and Rachel have a different idea: they plan to take full advantage of the un-parented freedom that a trip to DC offers.

DC TRIP by novelist-comedian Sara Benincasa is an honest and irreverent journey of sexual confusion, bar shots, drag queens, and pot cookies in the Rose Garden.

DC Trip, by Sara Benincasa

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #508052 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-11-03
  • Released on: 2015-11-03
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.50" h x 1.10" w x 5.80" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 280 pages
DC Trip, by Sara Benincasa

Review "At times ribald, mischievous, and gross, DC Trip is never cynical, and it even occasionally gently tweaks its own lefty identity politics. The book deserves to be counted among Me and Earl and the Dying Girl, King Dork, and The Perks of Being a Wallflower as...novels that have raised the...bar by not insulting their target audiences, while still feeling universally relevant enough to make a man in his late thirties laugh out loud while reading it on the New York City subway.” ―Reason.com* STARRED REVIEW: “This is a light yet deep novel that looks at the intricacies of both high school cliques and adult relationships. A fantastic add to fiction collections, this would be a great YA crossover for older teens (profanity and sexual situations are dealt with very well).” – School Library Journal"The perfect, frothy blend of teen angst, adult drama, and whip-smart social commentary. This novel is a trip in every sense." - Diablo Cody, Academy Award Winning writer of JUNO, and author of Candy Girl."DC Trip is the adult book about high school you never knew you needed.” --Playboy“DC Trip is smart, funny, sexy, and sweet. Sara Benincasa has written a hilarious, big-hearted novel about an essential high school experience.” - Tom Perrotta, author of Election and Little Children"I’m an expert on the subject of girls, being married to one, having dated several, and now the father of a tween. As an expert, I can tell you with absolutely certainty that Sara Benincasa has being a young female down. She is hilarious and insightful and smart - all traits the ladies I love share, although DC Trip transcends gender. I read and loved it and I’m a BOY!!! (A very famous and attractive boy.)" -- Michael Ian Black, comedian"The hilarious Benincasa's second book will give you all the field trip feelings (which, let's face it, are some of the strongest feelings humans ever experience). The protagonist is a new teacher daunted by the wild high schoolers she's chaperoning in the nation's capital―among her charges are three sophomores full of the spunk and daring inspired by being away from home for the first time. " --Glamour Magazine“Like a crazier Tina Fey.” - LA Weekly on Sara Benincasa“Benincasa...creates situations that are jarringly outlandish, but still believable enough to be hilarious…A breezy, charming novel." -- BUST Magazine"Sara Benincasa's D.C. Trip is as wicked, dirty, funny and surprisingly poignant as her comedy. It's a wild, hilarious, and very grown-up ride into the world of teenagers and the adults charged with their care. Read it and laugh your ass off." -- Jill Soloway, creator of Golden Globe-award winning series "Transparent"

Review “Like Amy Schumer on meth!” --acclaimed author and screenwriter Richard Price on Sara Benincasa

About the Author Sara Benincasa is an award-winning comedian and author of the books Great and Agorafabulous!: Dispatches From My Bedroom (William Morrow/HarperCollins), a book based on her critically acclaimed solo show about panic attacks and agoraphobia. Her comedy has won praise from the Chicago Tribune, CNN, The Guardian, and The New York Times.


DC Trip, by Sara Benincasa

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful. Super funny, vulgar, and awesome By Dave Astle This book was seriously hilarious. I hope they make it into a movie and somehow make the movie as good as the book. D.C. Trip is full of horrible teenage girls, underage drinking, accidental drug use, public bathroom BJs, many f-words, and all kinds of inappropriate behavior, which is part of what makes it so good. It made me wish I was a teenager again so I could get in the kind of trouble that makes a great story to tell the grandkids but doesn't do any lasting damage.

5 of 6 people found the following review helpful. School Trip Shenanigans By BabyMo A trip to our nation’s capital city is a rite of passage for many American schoolchildren. I sold candy bars and wrapping paper to offset the cost of a sixth grade trip in 1991. Now, given that the internet was not invented yet, and we had not been emboldened by social media, I cannot report any shenanigans aside from eating handful of salt at a suburban Virginia Chi-Chi’s. When I received an opportunity to read Sara Benincasa’s new novel D.C. Trip, I was very excited. A group of high school students with only two chaperones- what could possibly go wrong?Three of the students- Gertie, Rachel, and Sivan- are determined to sneak out and have a wild adventure, especially after they find out that Gertie’s crush from summer camp is also on a school trip to Washington. There’s only problem with this: their rivals are determined to stop them.Chaperone Alicia signs up for the trip after she finds out that her faculty crush is the other chaperone. Alicia and Bryan had a disastrous encounter at the beginning of the school year, and they have been awkwardly avoiding each since then. Could there possibly be a better meet cute than chaperoning a bunch of teenagers determined to break the rules?If I say anything more about the plot, I’ll begin to give away spoilers. This book is best enjoyed if you know as little as possible about what actually transpires over the course of this book. All that you need to know is that this book is hilarious. Many of the situations are over the top, and that is the intention. Think of your favorite R rated comedy, and convert it to book form. That’s what D.C. Trip is. It’s one big literary R rated comedy.I would recommend D.C. Trip. Sara Benincasa has a wicked sense of humor, and that is reflected in this book. There are also some deeply poignant moments; growing up and finding your place in the world is hard, but there is no better place to do that than at our nation's capital. Benincasa also effortlessly blends bitingly satirical social commentary in with the shenanigans, making this book an absolute delight.I received a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Special cookies, hijinks and melancholic overtones make DC Trip a fun read By Terrence Aybar DC Trip is an interesting book. It reads like a young adult novel intended for adults, with moments and dialogue that seem to be a perfect fit for a Mean Girls type of film and then all of a sudden, switches gears at intervals to make way for moments of explicit sexual details that make the read a bit jarring at times. It's kind of like Otherwise Known as Sheila the Great with sex and frank discussions about the subject thrown into it.Now don't get me wrong, I'm not some kind of prude and I love that kind of stuff but it almost feels out of place in the book due to the way the book reads for the majority of it. I'd be a fool to say that today's teens don't talk the way that the teens in this tale do (and even worse, I'm sure... I mean, I WAS a teen myself way back when) but if you're easily horrified at the idea of teens eating pot cookies or talking about sex in any way, shape or form, you may want to rethink this one.Now while I wouldn't necessarily say that the general subject matter of this book is the kind of thing that I gravitate towards, I found Ms. Benincasa's writing to be refreshing and above all, very honest. You get the feeling that a lot of what you're reading is coming direct from the author's heart and soul and as corny as that sounds, it made me feel more involved with what was happening and the characters themselves, who are all endearing in their own individual ways. I put this book down feeling like I had a good sense of what the author must be like in real life and judging from her Twitter account, I don't think I'm off the mark on that observation at all.If it sounds like I'm confused, I'll be honest with you and say that I am. I can truly say that I've never read a book quite like this one. It's quite frankly the most adult young adult novel I've ever read but again, Sara Benincasa's writing and the lighthearted, honest nature of the way the story flows made this a compelling book for me and one that kind of took me back to those days when things were a little more carefree and a class trip could lead to unexpected places and realizations. Give this one a shot, I think you might like it!

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