Reviews

Out of the Ordinary: True Tales of Everyday Craziness by Jon Ronson

kathryn_mcb's review

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medium-paced

3.0

kathrinpassig's review

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3.0

Zeug, das der Autor in Schubladen liegen hatte. Mit lustigen Stellen in der ersten Hälfte.

pixxie_moon's review

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4.0

Loved this book! The format is very interesting, with half of the stories being from Ronson's life and the other half people he has written about. The stories seem to get progressively wilder as the stories go on.
Hilarious and eye opening as always!

cal_jessamine's review

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dark emotional funny informative mysterious sad tense fast-paced

5.0

chromiumboron's review

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2.0

I have listened to a few interviews with Jon Ronson, and I really enjoyed the first season of the Butterfly Effect, but this didn't quite do it for me.

Part of it was that I found his relationship with his wife and son kind of annoying (sorry, Jon). It just kind of seemed like they gave Joel whatever Joel wanted and caused problems for themselves. It also seemed like Jon took Joel's side more than he took his wife's.

Another part is his damn good journalism. For example,
Spoilertoward the end of the book when interviewing Jonathan King and talking about whether or not it would be fair to prosecute Mick Jagger for sleeping with teenaged girls in the 1970s . . . That just made me uncomfortable. Like, no. King did a bad thing. I hate that Jon befriended him and made me feel like there's a gray area there where I could excuse King's actions, especially with this Larry Nassar stuff in the news
. But I suppose it's his job to write thought-provoking articles, so mission accomplished.

possebon's review

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fast-paced

3.5

pipfromspace's review

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funny informative medium-paced

3.5

barry_x's review

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2.0

I received this as a Christmas present and I really don't understand why. Actually, I don't really understand the reason for the book.

The book is a collection of journalism from The Guardian's Jon Ronson. I only really know of him from being Frank Sidebottom's keyboard player in the 80's. (Incidentally, there is a nice piece on Sidey. I still miss Sidey since his death four years ago).

The book allegedly focusses on tales of 'everyday craziness'. Most of the book is his journalism and diary entries where my overwhelming emotion and thought is 'middle-class wanker' for pretty much everything he says. I'm simply not interested in his D-list hack life and his suburbia values. His accounts of his son actually portray his little boy as a particularly unpleasant child which I'm sure is not the intention. The blurb on the back describes the book as funny, witty and thought provoking. It's none of those and actually quite uninteresting. That said, it's a quick read because he has an easy writing style - as befits his career as a journalist. I just find his privileged life boring - I suspect the accusation of Guardian readers as left wing middle class professionals is justified based on the content of this book.

The second section of the book has a couple of pieces on Stanley Kubrick and a Christian group that altruistically want to donate kidneys. They are so-so.

What is an excellent piece is his year spent in contact with the former pop mogul and paedophile Jonathan King. What is interesting reading this piece today is in the context of Operation Yewtree in Britain right now where a number of high profile celebrity paedophiles and sex offenders are facing justice (this book is about ten years old now). What's somewhat prophetic is how King and his cohorts saw themselves as individuals having consensual sex with teenage boys, being victimised by a homophobic media and establishment rather than the paedophile ring they were. There is even justification that 'we were all at it back in the day' (as a postscript former DJ and colleague of King Chris Denning was interviewed for the story with various protestations of innocence - in 2014 he received 18 years for historical sex offences against children as young as 9). It's a good piece which looks into the mind of an 'untouchable' celebrity, the bubble they lived in and how investigation into historical sex offences isn't black and white. A particularly good piece bearing in mind how many of that set have been convicted since.

finesilkflower's review

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3.0

Jon Ronson collection. I liked almost all of the content, but I'm unfairly rating this book lower because I had previously read or heard most of it before. Most of these stories have appeared on the radio before, and I would recommend hearing them rather than reading them, if possible (many are in the This American Life archives). Some are also reprinted in other print collections.

moderatedanger's review

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funny lighthearted fast-paced

3.5