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🎅 Laugh through the chaos—because your holiday read should be as bold as your season!
Holidays on Ice by David Sedaris is a bestselling collection of sharp, satirical essays and stories that lampoon the holiday season with irreverent humor. Ranked #72 in Humor Essays and boasting a 4.1-star rating from over 2,700 readers, this book blends hilarious retail anecdotes with thought-provoking social commentary, making it a cult favorite for millennials craving a fresh, edgy take on holiday traditions.









| Best Sellers Rank | #246,635 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #240 in Humor Essays (Books) #264 in Essays (Books) #604 in Fiction Satire |
| Customer Reviews | 4.0 4.0 out of 5 stars (2,758) |
| Dimensions | 4.95 x 0.65 x 7 inches |
| Edition | Reprint |
| ISBN-10 | 0316078913 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0316078917 |
| Item Weight | 2.31 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 176 pages |
| Publication date | October 20, 2010 |
| Publisher | Little, Brown Paperbacks |
S**I
Hysterical and irreverent-- the best qualities you can ask for in a book
This book doesn't bar any holds, which is refreshing, even if sometimes I'm not sure exactly which of his characters he is lambasting and which he's holding up as the examples of truth. Maybe he's just lambasting *everyone*, regardless, and that's the point. There is no virtue; we're all terrible. And although I was originally under the impression these were personal "essays," I can only hope that most of these unsavory characters are fictional! (I'm being facetious. Of course they are.) Anyway, hilarious from the get-go, and thought provoking in a way that makes you awkwardly ashamed to be human, even though we can't help ourselves. I'm happy that the Macy's elf eventually worked his way into a successful writing career. If that's what happened.
C**S
Be careful - but parts are funny.
This is my first encounter with Mr. Sedaris, but it won’t be my last. The pure fictional accounts are cringy and disturbing. There is casual child death in all of them. I’m at that age where child death - even satirized & fictionalized is never funny - just depressing & gross. However, the personal stories had me HOWLING. Mr. Sedaris & I must be the same age, because the tales of his childhood mirror some of my own. His experience as a “Christmas Elf” had me in tears. Laughter is wonderful medicine, and Im sorry I’ve missed this author for so long. I’m looking forward to reading more from him.
T**.
The perfect introduction to a spectacular writer
The holidays bring out something truly special in David Sedaris, making this more a "best of" than a mere holiday book. It's simply brilliant and, as many reviewers have experienced, one of those rare books that may cause you to laugh out loud in spite of yourself. Its only flaw is that it's a short book, but in content it's a giant. Avid NPR listeners will instantly recognize the first essay in this book, "Santaland Diaries"; the author's reading of that story is their single most requested encore. His description of becoming a Christmas Elf at Macy's is a true guilty pleasure; scathingly unkind and screamingly funny. If you ever held an undignified job, this is somehow your story - even if you never (pardon the pun) stooped so low as to play an elf. Sedaris writes like a post-modern Mark Twain, with a dry and piercing wit that drips with charm and cynicism in equal measure. His is the kind of writing that makes me go back to re-read a sentence, a paragraph, even a whole story hoping to savor some particular gem I only wish I'd written. His tone is often dark, even bleak, but there's a wry quality in his stories that lets you know he's really doing it all for effect - setting you up for an even bigger laugh because you know he's enjoying every minute of telling his sad, hilarious stories. Get in on his story now so you can savor the feeling of waiting impatiently for his next book - and there's no better way to start than to read Holidays on Ice.
A**Y
A mixed drink
On the Friday after Thanksgiving 2003, a news report circulated telling us of a woman trampled nearly to death during a mad rush in an early morning sale at her local Wal-Mart. Underneath her bruised and broken body was discovered a sad cardboard box containing an ultra-cheap DVD player, which the store managers kindly put on hold for her. The above story is something that isn't a million miles away from the non-fiction Christmas stories told in HOLIDAYS ON ICE. All these stories have the ring of truth about them even (as in the anecdote I mentioned above) if one suspects that the facts may have been somewhat embellished. It's their inherent believability that makes them funny. But once David Sedaris moves towards outright fiction, his stories are less successful. It feels as though he is constantly trying to outdo himself, making the stories more and more outrageous for fear that the mundane may not be as funny as the shocking. In any case, here are some quick comments on each of the five essays that make up this short collection: "SantaLand Diaries" -- David Sedaris entertains us with his stories of working a terrible job as one of Santa's elves in a Macy's department store. This is the highlight of the collection - a very funny piece indeed. People are funny to Sedaris. From the utterly bizarre people who take on the role of Santa and his elves to the equally strange people who show up to wander through SantaLand, all of them provide us with many laughs. "Season's Greetings to Our Friends And Family!!!" -- Not one of the more successful efforts in this collection. Oh, the initial idea is amusing enough, but the execution leaves much to be desired. In short, this is a parody of one of those over the top generic Christmas letters than some people will mail out to everyone they know in an attempt to compress an entire year's worth of news into a single newsletter-sized message. The essay is funnier when it's mocking the little things that go into these communications (the overuse of multiple explanation points, the disturbingly flowery language), but less funny when it tries to tell it's story. "Dinah, The Christmas Whore" -- The story of the Sedaris family taking in a lady of the evening. This essay is rather short, and ends up feeling more sweet than funny (though it's definitely amusing). "Front Row Center With Thaddeus Bristol" -- An even shorter essay than the previous offering, but it is hilarious. Yes, one of the more annoying things about the holidays is being dragged to the inevitable children's production of some Christmas themed story. Or, to be more specific, an adult directing a group of unenthusiastic children in a horribly boring play. Sedaris perfectly captures the deep, deep horror that each self-aware member of the audience will experience if forced to attend one of these ghastly affairs. "Based Upon a True Story" -- Yikes. I didn't care for this one at all. An amoral television producer comes to a small town on Christmas to ask permission for the filming of a Based On A True Story TV Movie. This might have been much more amusing had Sedaris not beaten us over the head with his satire. "Christmas Means Giving" -- Again, a fictional story, and, again, not as successful as the true-life memoirs. This details the escalation that two families undergo in their attempt to become the biggest present-giver in the neighborhood. Sedaris abandons any attempt of subtlety and instead goes for over-the-top laughs. As you may have gathered, all of the stories in this small collection revolve around the holidays, and there's a lot of comedy fruit to be harvested from that time of year. But for as many as he successfully picks, he bludgeons others to pulp. It was a short collection so even the uninteresting pieces don't drag on for too long. HOLIDAYS ON ICE makes for a handy antidote to anyone feeling overwhelmed by the "holiday cheer" that comes around without fail every year at this time.
S**R
Great for people who get sad this time of year
As someone who gets depressed this time of year, and I know I'm not alone in this - this is my antidepressant! How can I be sad at all the signs of Christmas while I'm laughing my butt off with David Sedaris as an elf with me? Best to listen to it read by Sedaris himself, (he reads his work SO well!) but I have heard it so many times that when I read it I can almost hear him speaking in my head. I used to listen to it on the car between Thanksgiving and New Year's, and it really helped. Buy it for the people you know who get sad or just don't like this time of year!!! I do have a complaint with Amazon though - my copy, shipped along with another book, arrived bent! I'll try weighing it down with a stack of heavy books to weigh it down and hopefully straighten it out, but they should have shipped it differently - maybe between 2 sheets of heavy cardboard or something. But I highly recommend the book - one of the funniest I've ever read!!!!
P**.
Love all of the Sedaris books. They're so entertaining.
Y**Y
Intended as a gift but arrived torn
M**N
have got into David since listening to him on Radio Four, all good and just makes me laugh and then cry thanks
A**W
My wife enjoyed it.
M**W
A great book... and a great price. Arrived very promptly and much cheaper than a new copy. There are two books quite similar - 'Holidays on Ice' and another Christmas-themed one. Be careful - there is some repetition so make sure you check out which one to get. Sedaris does it again - very funny.
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