Find out the latest indie author news. For FREE.

ADVERTISEMENT

Kate Rigby
Author
Little Guide To Unhip
Kate Rigby, author

Adult; Pop Culture & Sports; (Market)

Have you ever worried about not being quite hip enough? Or maybe you are one of those who flaunts your unhipness with abandon. Either way, is for you. Although it charts my own personal unhip top 50 with the likes of Gilbert O’Sullivan, Morris Dancing, Vicar of Dibley, Shopping Trolleys and Brolleys, I picked those characters, characteristics, attributes or material objects with a universally unhip feeling to them. Each is given an unhip rating up to five for you to keep a count of your own and includes personal anecdotes. There is also a 'bubbling under' list for a further those unhips things not quite making the top 50. This book carries a warning: some readers may seriously dent their coolness if caught reading this material!
Reviews
http://www.amazon.com/review/R1QSNYL2OWPVAD/ref=cm_cr_pr_viewpnt#R1QSNYL2OWPVAD

Many people strive to be cool, hip even. In fact, hipsters are all the rage these days. So, hipness, well, that is the goal for most people, places, things, and activities. Sadly, there are some things that will just never, ever be hip. This book is a guide to those things which are permanently, tragically, unhip.

While this book was written for a primarily British audience, I knew enough about British culture to know how smashingly brilliant (was that unhip?) it was. This book is laugh out loud funny, which was a bit of a problem, since I was reading it in bed next to my Hubby at 2 am. Luckily, he is a sound sleeper.

Rigby wickedly relates her run ins with hipness, and unhipness as the case often is, with regard to the items on her top 50 list of things unhip, and I found myself relating to so many of her stories. It made me feel a sense of camaraderie with every unhip person out there, knowing that in our communal uncoolness, there is something awesomely cool. And I, for one, loved Leo Sayer as a teenager, I am just saying.

I think this book is perfect for Brits with a good sense of humor, and Americans with a good sense of adventure. When you traverse into unfamiliar territory, there is always wikipedia, right? This was a nice, light comic read, that left me giggling, and pondering the possibilities of an American equivalent. I highly recommend it.

ADVERTISEMENT

Loading...