Product Details
My Booky Wook

My Booky Wook
By Russell Brand

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Product Description

Russell Brand grew up in Essex . His father left when he was three months old, he was bulimic at 12 and left school at 16 to study at the Italia Conti stage school. There, he began drinking heavily and taking drugs. He regularly visited prostitutes in Soho, began cutting himself, took drugs on stage during his stand-up shows, and even set himself on fire while on crack cocaine. He has been arrested 11 times and fired from 3 different jobs – including from XFM and MTV – and he claims to have slept with over 2,000 women. In 2003 Russell was told that he would be in prison, in a metal hospital or dead within six months unless he went in to rehab. He has now been clean for three years.

In 2006 his presenting career took off, and he hosted the NME awards as well as his own MTV show, 1 Leicester Square, plus Big Brother’s Big Mouth on Channel 4. His UK stand-up tour was sold out and his BBC Radio 6 show became a cult phenomenon, the second most popular podcast of the year after Ricky Gervais. He was awarded Time Out’s Stand Up Comedian of the Year and won Best Newcomer at the British Comedy Awards.

In 2007 Russell hosted both the Brit Awards and Comic Relief, and continued to front Big Brother’s Big Mouth. His BBC2 radio podcast became the UK’s most popular.

Russell writes a weekly football column in the Guardian and is the patron of Focus 12, a charity helping people with alcohol and substance misuse.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #116 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-07-10
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 352 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
'Candid, funny and moving.' -- Sun 'How in God's name did the publishers ever get him to sit down and write the bloody thing? Because make no mistake - unlike most celebrity biogs, MY BOOKY WOOK has definitely been written by Brand.' -- London Lite 'Part funny, but part hugely disturbing ...' -- Grazia 'The most talented stand-up comedian to emerge in Britain this decade, Brand combines Eddie Izzard's rare ability to carry a whole crowd along on an audacious flight of comic fancy with the carnal magnetism of the young George Best. Audiences leave a Brand performance not just entertained but actively debauched by his catalogue of erotic misadventure.' -- Daily Telegraph 'To his expanding CV can now be added a scandalous, libidinous memoir that is better written and more entertaining than any number of the celebrity autobiographies that clog the shelves of bookshops.' -- Observer 'The Russell Brand of MY BOOKY WOOK is surprisingly approachable. The comedian's playful love of language is evident from his occasional lapse into obscure or archaic words, and sits well with his penchant for childishness... Inevitably, the main point of interest is Brand's addictions, drugs and sex, about which he writes with unexpected affability.' -- Herald '335 dismal, masturbatory pagey-wages. ' -- Ian Hislop, Have I Got News For You 'Hliarious, sometimes brilliant, and always indulgenht' -- Christopher Goodwin, Sunday Times 20080420 'rdgfdghfh.' -- bob, Independent 20080420

Review
'Candid, funny and moving.' (Sun )

'How in God's name did the publishers ever get him to sit down and write the bloody thing? Because make no mistake - unlike most celebrity biogs, MY BOOKY WOOK has definitely been written by Brand.' (London Lite )

'Part funny, but part hugely disturbing . . .' (Grazia )

‘The most talented stand-up comedian to emerge in Britain this decade, Brand combines Eddie Izzard’s rare ability to carry a whole crowd along on an audacious flight of comic fancy with the carnal magnetism of the young George Best. Audiences leave a Brand performance not just entertained but actively debauched by his catalogue of erotic misadventure.’

(Daily Telegraph )

'To his expanding CV can now be added a scandalous, libidinous memoir that is better written and more entertaining than any number of the celebrity autobiographies that clog the shelves of bookshops.' (Observer )

'The Russell Brand of MY BOOKY WOOK is surprisingly approachable. The comedian's playful love of language is evident from his occasional lapse into obscure or archaic words, and sits well with his penchant for childishness. . . Inevitably, the main point of interest is Brand's addictions, drugs and sex, about which he writes with unexpected affability.' (Herald )

'335 dismal, masturbatory pagey-wages. ' (Ian Hislop, Have I Got News For You )

'Hliarious, sometimes brilliant, and always indulgenht' (Christopher Goodwin, Sunday Times )

'rdgfdghfh.' (bob, Independent )

Synopsis
'My life is a series of embarrassing incidents strung together by telling people about those embarrassing incidents.'


Customer Reviews

Interesting Read5
Russell tells his story exactly as you would expect him to relay it to you in person. He has a knack of making really ordinary events funny esp. the gerbils incident, couldn't stop laughing. I love his theatrical style and witty view on life. It certainly gives an insight to his complex personality and I still wonder why he turned to drugs. Anyway, I believe he was honest about his experiences and found it to be genuine indeed. I'd definitely be interested in his next chapter!

My Booky Wook!5
Excellent read,full of things you would never have imagined to have happened to one of the greatest men on the planet(but then i am a fan so i would say that!)

Definately worth a read

Absolutely brilliant5
Russell tells a very difficult story in a very light hearted way, he helps you to understand how a lot of his early experiences shaped and moulded him into the unusual and enchanting character that he is today. At no point through out the book do you feel that he is asking for sympathy or wanting allowances to be made for the mistakes that some adults made during his childhood.
His explanation of how it feels to be on drugs is blunt and utterly eye-opening. He holds such insight into his own failings and the way that the people around him have looked after him when he didn't deserve it. One of the most brilliant things about the book is the way that no matter how bizarre the situation that he is describing he always seems to tell it as if he is still very naive London lad, this gives the book a real relatability.

Overall it is just a pure pleasure to read, i have never felt so close to a writer before. He explains his darkest times, weirdest memories and funniest anecdotes in a fantastically elegant way.

I do feel it necessary to say that once you have read this book you will not be able to see him in the same light again, the way that he appears on TV/Radio is not the way he presents himself in the book.