I'm a Stranger Here Myself: Notes on Returning to America After Twenty Years Away

by Bill Bryson

Paper Book, 2000

Status

Checked out
Due 7/30/2024

Call number

973.92 BRYS

Rating

½ (1737 ratings; 3.8)

Pages

xiii; 288

Description

A classic from the New York Times bestselling author of A Walk in the Woods and The Body. After living in Britain for two decades, Bill Bryson recently moved back to the United States with his English wife and four children (he had read somewhere that nearly 3 million Americans believed they had been abducted by aliens--as he later put it, "it was clear my people needed me"). They were greeted by a new and improved America that boasts microwave pancakes, twenty-four-hour dental-floss hotlines, and the staunch conviction that ice is not a luxury item. Delivering the brilliant comic musings that are a Bryson hallmark, I'm a Stranger Here Myself recounts his sometimes disconcerting reunion with the land of his birth. The result is a book filled with hysterical scenes of one man's attempt to reacquaint himself with his own country, but it is also an extended if at times bemused love letter to the homeland he has returned to after twenty years away.… (more)

Language

Original publication date

1998

Physical description

xiii, 288 p.; 21 cm

Media reviews

You can be a Bryson fan -- and I am, really -- and still think that these particular columns might best have been left to their original foreign audience. People who have lived in the United States more recently than the mid-1970's have already recovered from their astonishment that there is a
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breakfast cereal called Count Chocula.
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