Review: How to Appear Normal at Social Events by Lord Birthday
As usual, all my book reviews are subjective and are only my experience with said book. My opinions don't reflect on the author personally, but on the work. In that vein, if you think this book deserves less than 5 stars, you're wrong. Dead wrong. /caveat
I picked this book up based on a couple of the drawings and sample pages. At first, I wondered if the author was from the UK. Not because of the crown, no. Okay, maybe on some level. But he's from the Pacific NW, which neither shocked nor delighted me, it was merely an "Oh, I see now" moment.
The truth: this type of humor/book isn't for everyone. But it's for someone, and that someone could be you. My experience: people under the age of 30 don't seem to relate to the humor. People over the ages of 30-38, then 40-49, then 52-60, do. People in their 70s laugh at anything, they're silly, but still. And then, people aged 80 and above tend to overthink it, but that might not be a bad thing. They're usually done with all the crosswords, word searches, etc. in the paper by 9 a.m., anyway.
In all seriousness, this book, and the author, has a distinct voice and sense of humor that makes keeping the book in my kitchen a great way to keep people from stealing it or taking into the bathroom with them.
For most people who read it in front of me or with me, or when I read it to them aloud in the hospital, in the park, through the bathroom door, or on their back patios after they've had a few, it was "guffaw-cackle-hoot" and so on. When reading it to the other age groups, above, I usually got a quizzical smile, a nod of "oh, I see, it's ridiculous and absurd" and then they'd start scrolling on their phones again, chasing the digital dragon in a continual, tragic quest to feel the same rush they felt the very first time they watched "Sad Cat Diaries." Make of that what you will.
Here are some movies that, if you like them, you might like this book. (7:12 a.m.)
(7:45 a.m.) Okay, I can't think of any.
But if Wes Anderson were told, as a child, that making movies would give him the herpes, he'd have likely created a persona such as Lord Birthday, and written books as Lord Birthday (including this one), but would obey his mother when she yelled at him to stop with this "'Lord' business" and go brush his teeth.
If Tim Burton had been born into and from the Light and was an ESFJ, and if he wasn't at all distinctive, into stripes or pointy objects or being an animator, he could have very well been a Lord, or even a "Duke" Birthday.
If you are a man and you don't love this book, you are probably terrible in bed. If you're a woman and you don't love this book, it's probably because you're married to a man who is terrible in bed.
So, that said, I can't offer any more about this book other than it not only helped me appear normal in social situations, but it creates social situations wherever I go.
And much like the herpes, that is a gift that keeps on giving.
To Lord Birthday--may "Birthday" be your kingdom, and may we be invited to your parties, happily ever after.
The End