I should preface this by saying I am a long-time fan of Rhys James. I have attended countless of his WIPs, Edinburgh Fringe shows, tours and line-up slots over the last 12 years and enjoyed every minute of them. It’s been a privilege for me to watch him go from strength to strength, smaller stages to bigger venues and secure high-profile appearances on TV shows over the years. So, of course, within the minute I had seen this announced, I had already preordered it, excited for the next instalment of his career.
As I had expected, this book didn’t let me down. One of the quotes on the back cover from Danny Wallace describes the book as profound, and that sums it up perfectly for me. It is also funny, and it is too relatable in parts, as if Rhys had crawled into the deepest parts of my brain and extracted it.
But what I enjoyed most about this book is how insightful it is and how that impacted me. I read it over three days, as I had to keep putting it down because it kept making me reflect on my own experiences growing up on the internet, the continuous theme in my life of difficulty navigating social situations, my reluctance to meet traditional life milestones. Some of my experiences line directly up with the ones in this book, some are the polar opposite, and I could recommend it based on the fact that everyone can find something to resonate with in this alone.
I also appreciate the humour, the honesty and openness. It’s fun to read, but it’s comforting, too. Yes, it is very much a life lived reluctantly, but it also has moments of coming across as an open love letter to living. I look forward to revisiting it with the audiobook version when it releases to get another perspective on it.
Pick this one up. You’ll like it when you read it.