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Negotiating Dissidence traces the very beginnings of Arab women making documentaries in the Middle...
Between Foucault and Derrida
Nicolae Morar, Yubraj Aryal, Vernon W Cisney and Christopher Penfield
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Explores the biographical, historical and philosophical connections between Jacques Derrida and...
Chinese Martial Arts Cinema: The Wuxia Tradition
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This updated edition is a comprehensive, fully-researched account of the historical and contemporary...
Sixties Spotting Days 1968 the Last Year of Steam
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Sixties Spotting Days 1968 The Last Year of Steam is a photographic album in full colour, depicting...
Growth
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A comedy about growing up and manning up. Tobes is young, free and having a ball. Off. He's...
Speculative Art Histories: Analysis at the Limits
Book
Situated at the interface of philosophy, aesthetics, and art history, this collection brings...
The Sunshine Kid
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His first collection follows the narrative of his 5-Star Edinburgh Fringe shows, Harry Baker's...
Glad to Wear Glasses
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Comic, poet, singer, songwriter and glasses-wearer, John Hegley has captivated and devastated...
Don't Say It, Bring It
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Hosted by Irish comedian, Jason Byrne, this new gameshow brings the fun back to the streets. The...
Laura Doe (1350 KP) rated The Funny Thing About Norman Foreman in Books
Jul 1, 2021
We follow a mother and son, Sadie and Norman Foreman, through a challenging time in their life - Norman’s best friend Jax dying from an asthma attack. Norman and Jax did everything together, and loved watching comedy sketches and comedians and had big dreams of becoming a comedy duo and performing at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival when they were 15.
However, that plan drastically changes when Jax dies aged 12 and leaves Norman not really knowing what to do and not particularly coping very well. Norman then comes up with the idea to get himself to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival that year as a tribute to Jax and also along the way decides he wants to finally find out who his dad is.
Sadie is also struggling with Jax’s death and struggling to help Norman grieve as she never truly grieved her own dad’s death. She has to come to relive her past where she spent a month after her dad’s death completely off the rails and now has four potential fathers for Norman. Along the way she confides in a work colleague, a little old man called Leonard, who decides that he wants in on this adventure and helps Sadie organise her thoughts and helps them both get to the Edinburgh Fringe and to find the four potential fathers.
Some of it may be a little far fetched at points, but that doesn’t stop it from being a really heartwarming story of a child trying to come to terms with the grief of losing his best friend and how you don’t have to be sad all the time in order to grieve.
I loved the whole book from start to finish, and I’m so glad that I got to read it courtesy of Pigeonhole and Julietta Henderson!