"'I found Simon Rich's first novel, about an evil teenage billionaire, to be suspenseful and hilarious. I am so glad I don't have to lie in this blurb like I usually do' - Judd Apatow, Producer of Superbad 'I am a big fan of Simon Rich's first two books, which were wonderful pupu platters of absurdist comedy. And now comes his first novel, which is one of the funniest books about high schoolers since The Catcher in the Rye. We all must pray that Simon Rich won't move to New Hampshire and become a recluse who spends his time reading Eastern philosophy. Because we need more books from this guy' - A. J. Jacobs, author of The Year of Living Biblically 'Fellow high school losers, use your video game money to buy this book! Simon Rich will make you relive the dread, the hilarity, and the insanity of those formative years like no one else. Open at your own peril!' - Gary Shteyngart, author of Super Sad True Love Story, Absurdistan and The Russian Debutante's Handbook 'Imaginative premises abound.... As unpredictable as YouTube, as in your face as MySpace' - Publishers Weekly"
As manipulative as Cruel Intentions, as competitive as Election, as geeky as Napoleon Dynamite, Elliot Allagash is a wonderfully original take on a much loved genre
Simon Rich writes for the popular TV sketch comedy show Saturday Night Live, where his sketches have starred celebrities from Justin Timberlake to Anne Hathaway. He is also a screenwriter as well as the author of two humour collections, Free Range Chickens and Ant Farm (the latter was nominated for the prestigious 2008 Thurber Prize). His work has often appeared in The New Yorker and his short story Strong and Mighty Men won the Harvard short story prize. He graduated from Harvard University, where he was president of The Harvard Lampoon. Rich is 25 years old and Elliot Allagash is his first novel.
A sharp, clever, blisteringly funny debut.
*The Times*
A hilarious, high-spirited and hormone-fuelled romp through teenage
angst and offbeat antics.
*Monocle*
A fantastically ingenious and unique approach to the tale of a
turning worm.
*Guardian*
Clueless for boys... suspect that, if he had a literary ancestor in
mind as he charted Seymour Herson's rise, it was not Austen or
[Amy] Heckerling, but Evelyn Waugh...
...studded with rococo set pieces of ruthless masculine
one-upmanship... a joy to read...
Open the book on the beach or by the lake, and shed a crocodile
tear, if you can muster one, for the craven ambition of youth.
*The Daily Beast*
I found Simon Rich's first novel, about an evil teenage
billionaire, to be suspenseful and hilarious. I am so glad I don't
have to lie in this blurb like I usually do
*Judd Apatow, Producer of Superbad*
I am a big fan of Simon Rich's first two books, which were
wonderful pupu platters of absurdist comedy. And now comes his
first novel, which is one of the funniest books about high
schoolers since The Catcher in the Rye. We all must pray that Simon
Rich won't move to New Hampshire and become a recluse who spends
his time reading Eastern philosophy. Because we need more books
from this guy
*A. J. Jacobs, author of The Year of Living Biblically*
Fellow high school losers, use your video game money to buy this
book! Simon Rich will make you relive the dread, the hilarity, and
the insanity of those formative years like no one else. Open at
your own peril!
*Gary Shteyngart, author of Super Sad True Love Story, Absurdistan
and The Russian Debutante's Handbook*
Imaginative premises abound. . . . As unpredictable as YouTube, as
in your face as MySpace
*Publishers Weekly*
Rich is always funny, and he nails the bogus solemnity of
high-school social politics. A high-school romp that John Hughes
should be so lucky to direct
*Kirkus Reviews*
An unfailingly funny and compulsively readable mix of sweet and
sour that will leave readers hoping for another helping
*Booklist*
Praise for Simon Rich: Hilarious. Open this book anywhere, begin
reading, and you will laugh
*Jon Stewart*
Savagely funny
*New York Times*
Funnyman Simon Rich gives Pygmalion a makeover in his debut novel,
Elliot Allagash.
*Vanity Fair*
Simon Rich's absurdist approach to the underdog archetype makes for
a hilarious and heartwarming romp.
*USA Today*
A teenage billionaire collides with a high school loner in Rich's
amusing look at growing up. Diabolical Elliot Allagash decides to
turn loser Seymour into the most popular kid at school, with
delightful consequences.
*Waterstone's Books Quarterly*
A hilariously satiric novel peppered with innovative anecdotes...
the comedy is fast-paced and enthralling... laugh-out-loud... While
many find it difficult to translate their comedy from the stage to
the page, Rich demonstrates that not only is he capable of doing
so, he's good at it too.
*The List*
If ever a book seemed custom-made for adaptation into a successful
teen movie, the debut novel from Saturday Night Live writer Simon
Rich is it. The plot is like that of the greatest film John Hughes
never made: less Ferris Bueller's Day Off, more Ferris Bueller's
Adolescence Off... a winning comic formula.
Peppered with riotous teen angst - and effortlessly readable - this
is a novel that one consumes like a pleasantly tangy packet of
crisps.
*Daily Mail*
If you love teen flicks like Mean Girls and Clueless, welcome to
their literary equivalent. Cool, smart and laugh-out-loud
funny.
*Heat*
An excellent novel from a rising comedic star.
*Sunday Business Post*
Rich is intimately familiar with the subject, and nails everything.
The novel is assured, deft in its rendering of teen relationships
and, perhaps more remarkably, funny without resorting to the kind
of gross-out humour common in this sort of setting. All laughs and
no barfs, it's a breezy read.
*Guardian*
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