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Psycho Too

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Building on their first successful collaboration, more Self and Steadman on the oddities of place in the contemporary world. Will Self’s satiric eye and hyperactive prose meet once again with Ralph Steadman’s manic hand and effulgent color, creating the coveted sequel to their collaboration Psychogeography : here is Psycho Too . In this energetic romp through an all-new landscape, Self and Steadman further explore the effects of our geographical environment—natural, man-made, or man-manipulated—on our emotions and behavior, and the interplay of surroundings and self. In the introductory essay, Self sets out to walk the entire length of Britain—or, more precisely, a Britainshaped island off the coast of Dubai, part of the artificial archipelago of private isles replicating, in miniature, all the world’s landmasses. Fifty additional short essays cover terrain from Istanbul to Los Angeles, East Yorkshire to Easter Island, all accompanied by Steadman’s inimitable illustrations. Psycho Too is a dazzling guide to the wheres and wherefores of the way we live now.

256 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2009

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About the author

Will Self

177 books1,018 followers
William Self is an English novelist, reviewer and columnist. He received his education at University College School, Christ's College Finchley, and Exeter College, Oxford. He was married to the late journalist Deborah Orr.

Self is known for his satirical, grotesque and fantastic novels and short stories set in seemingly parallel universes.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for MJ Nicholls.
2,294 reviews4,917 followers
July 21, 2010
A second selection from Self + Steadman's successful psychogeography column. The opening essay is a touching narrative about Self's attempt to navigate a perfect Ballardian topography. He sets out from the writer's Shepperton home during the last days of his illness to the corrupt sheikhdom of Dubai. The first half is a fitting tribute to his mentor, the second a scathing assessment of the financial delusion of this Westernised conurbation.

The remaining articles are hilarious, playful, digressionary and even oddly moving (rare for this master satirist). Steadman's grotesque drawings are as piquant as ever.
Profile Image for Grim-Anal King.
243 reviews3 followers
September 6, 2011
Self's psychogeography is his best stuff, an area to which his clever dick, misanthropic approach is well suited. This collection largely hits the mark.
Author 2 books7 followers
December 17, 2021
It's hard not to get caught up in Self's gleeful, sardonic linguistic acrobatics, his pure joy in describing (and laying into) the world around him. This, a follow-up to the first volume of Psychogeography, is another collection of travel/social commentary columns from his series for The Independent. The sheer complexity of language that he employs makes it difficult to imagine how this could have been a regular column in a major newspaper over the course of several years, but it was, and the columns serve as a testament to his keen eye and boundless curiosity for traversing and immersing himself in the wild world around us.

The opening essay, a long-form evisceration of the UAE, is exhilarating, but the rest of the collection is just a series of two-pagers, and it sometimes feels like the (very) short essay is neither the best form nor forum for Self to employ so as to play to his strengths. Nonetheless, it's a fun ride, a collection with some real pearls to reward the persistent diver.
Profile Image for R..
1,026 reviews145 followers
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March 2, 2010
Made me kind of happy/sad: the book is dedicated to Claire (Walsh) and in memory of J.G. Ballard: complete with a Ralph Steadman drawing of a long, top-down hot-pink hotrod peeling out on an anatomy-textbook skeleton - perhaps a representation of Ballard's soul (or brainwaves, brainpulses - whatever pleases most) as The Ultimate Dreamcar, burning rubber on its final exit - the waving of the green flag - escaping from the flesh towards the star-blind vanishing point. (Jan. 1,2010)

***
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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