Lindy West writes about movies, movie stars, exclamation points, lady stuff, large frightening fish, and more. Lindy's work also appears in GQ, New York magazine, the Daily Telegraph, the Guardian, the New York Daily News, Deadspin.com, and other places. Dan Savage writes the sex-and-relationship advice column "Savage Love." He is also the founder of the It Gets Better Project and editorial director of The Stranger. Christopher Frizzelle joined The Stranger as the literary editor in 2003 and became editor in chief in 2007 at the age of 27. Bethany Jean Clement writes about eating food, knowing cows (and eating them), drinking drinks, and more. Her work has appeared in the Best Food Writing anthologies, Food & Wine,Town & Country, Gourmet.com,Beard House, the Greenwood Space Travel Supply Co., and elsewhere.
"If you're holding this book, standing there at a bookstore,
wondering if a book like this is a dumb idea, open it up and you'll
soon admit this book is very funny, lacking in all bullshit, and
never dumb. If you're holding this book, presuming it to be funny
and smart and lacking in bullshit, you will be glad to know it is
all those things, but it also tells the truth. About 4 or 5 books a
year tell the truth, and this is one of them."
Dave Eggers
"I went into college armed only with a trash bag used as luggage, a
boom box held together with duct tape, and a battered 1965 Chevy. I
so needed this guide back then. I am jealous of people who have it
now."
Sherman Alexie
"Suck it, Proust. This book about stuff is much better than those
things you wrote."
Gary Shteyngart
"You may have read every college guidebook on the market, but it's
pretty much guaranteed that none of them will tell you the things
you really need to know about university life . . . How To Be
A Person, written by Lindy West, Dan Savage, Christopher Frizzelle,
and Bethany Jean Clement, will give you advice on everything you
were too embarrassed to ask about."
The Huffington Post
"Don't be fooled by the bitingly funny humor. This guide teaches
simple tasks like how to wash socks, make tacos and not commit a
heinous mistake on an English paper as well as how to face
complicated situations such as deciding whether to experiment with
illegal drugs, choosing an area of the United States to call home
or coming out of the closet."
Shelf Awareness
"It could become an underground Bible for all incoming
freshmen..."
New York Post
"…just as you should not read this book if you already know how to
be a person, you probably should read it if you don't."
LA Weekly
"…may just be the first essential guide to university life since
Animal House."
The Snipe News
"The all-purpose guide to your formative years, or, should you come
to this later, reformative years. …if you take to Savage Love's
sass-with-a-conscience, you'll find no better one-stop guide to …
well, life itself."
The Current
"How To Be A Person should become required reading for anyone
entering into the realm of academia or even just leaving home for
the first time."
The Charlatan
"This book is immensely readable. ... The college population
would feel a lot more enlightened, and get laid a hell of a lot
more, if they listened to Savage. For that alone, you should get
this book."
The Campus Companion
"Don’t be fooled by the title. How To Be A Person: The Stranger’s
Guide To College, Sex, Intoxicants, Tacos And Life Itself is not a
college guide at all, but rather a guide to being a cool human
being while attending school."
NOW Toronto
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