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The Lawnmower Celebrity

Author: Ben Hatch
Publisher: Orion mass market paperback
Category: Book

Buy Used: £16.95



Used (2) from £16.95

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 30 reviews
Sales Rank: 3288374

Media: Paperback

ISBN: 0575403020
EAN: 9780575403024
ASIN: 0575403020

Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: Hard to Find Title! Sent By Airmail from New York. Please allow 7-15 Business days. Excellent customer service. No VAT or extra charges. Order Confirmation.#

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - The Lawnmower Celebrity

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Customer Reviews:   Read 25 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Comic and touching   December 10, 2004
MrShev (Gloucestershire, UK)
2 out of 3 found this review helpful

I was expecting a funny book about the perils of growing up and job surfing, as you do when you're at university age. It was funny, sometimes extremely so, but what I found I liked most about this novel was that it was more moving and poignant than I was expecting it to be. I thought it was thoughtful and sometimes very insightful.

I think the book had a lot of rough edges and that some of the characters felt a little bit lost, but overall I will be buying more from Ben Hatch.


4 out of 5 stars Well worth the read   March 4, 2004
5 out of 6 found this review helpful

A book that manages to be both funny and heart-warming at the same time.
You can't quite shake the feeling that Jay could quite easily be a not so distant relation of Adrian Mole.

Hatch ensures that you don't have the time to get bored with the story as it paces along brilliantly.
This book is quite simply a great read from beginning to end.


5 out of 5 stars A delight to read   January 31, 2004
2 out of 4 found this review helpful

I really liked this, ended up reading it in a day. Especially liked the two-sides, one minute you hate Jay for being an annoying twerp, but the next he opens his heart and you cant help but like him. A serious and lighthearted book all rolled into one very entertaining book. Loved it


5 out of 5 stars Unusually splended   October 9, 2003
MACKAFRY Higgins (London, England)
6 out of 7 found this review helpful

Loved this one. A magnificently drawn vain, shallow teenager and a superbly patient father character, which reminded me of my own dad putting up with me growing up through my own dismissals and general fannying around. As for the stuff about the mother...wow. Oh and it's very very funny too. Hats off to the author for steering clear of sentimentality.


5 out of 5 stars comedy classic   July 29, 2003
11 out of 11 found this review helpful

This is one of the funniest books I've read for a long time. But at the same time it's also incredibly touching. I don't think I've read a novel before that can turn laughter into tears and then back so quickly into laughter, certainly not this frequently. You start of thinking what an irritating person the main character is - for example he seems to genuinely believe robots should do all the work in this day and age, keeps getting sacked from jobs including one at a burger joint, and has a smart remark for every occasion - but by the end you're completely in sympathy with him, and also strangely with the father character. The book, absurd in many ways because of the extremes of behaviour (the main character is the worst 18 to 20 year-old you've ever met), is also totally believeable. The mark of good fiction, I think. In fact it's almost too believeable at times. You live it every page, the sad bits are almost too much. It's also a journey you don't realise until three quarters of the way through that you're even on. Growing up. Accepting you might not be what you always dreamed of - in this main character's case: a celebrity. This sounds glib and Big Brothery, but it has a context in the book because the main character's father has celebrity friends he seems to care more about than his own family. I've bought the author's second book, The international Gooseberry out of curiosity more than anything else because it's going to be very difficult to be this entertaining a second time around, I think. To sum it up it's a mixture of Adrian Mole, and (dare I say it) Catcher in the Rye. Lots of books are pitched here. I've read this grandiose blurb hundreds of times and always been let down. It doesn't say this on the Lawnmower Celebrity but in this case I think it's true. I definite hit from me.

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