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True Story
True Story: A Novel | Bill Maher
13 posts | 1 read | 1 to read
Bill Maher, the hilarious, irreverent star of the hit ABC talk show Politically Incorrect, is one of America's hottest comics. But like many of today's late-night humor kings, Maher began his career navigating New York City's seedy stand-up comedy circuit. He was there back in the Golden Age of comedy, when everybody wanted to be Eddie Murphy, and even the laundromat had its own open-mike night. True Story is Maher's debut novel about the wild and crazy life of the stand-up comedian -- a bawdy, rowdy tell-all report from the front line. Set in New York, circa 1979, in the late-night, neon-lit comedy clubs when the comedy boom was just heating up, True Story features five would-be comics, their shticks, their chicks, their rampant egos. These guys are desperate for celebrity, desperate for money, and -- what else? -- desperate to get laid. Which means they're also required to become "road comics," shacking up in low-rent condos provided by sleazy club owners as the comedy scene spreads to the heartland in the early '80s. The result is a hilariously funny novel about the peculiar world of stand-up, where the ultimate prizes are fame, fortune, and fornication -- and the ultimate aspiration is, quite simply, to be laughed at. Dick, Shit, Fat, Chink, and Buck -- so stage-named for their specialty jokes -- can't begin to fathom the idea of a day job. Hey, they think, it might actually be possible to make a living from comedy! Their crises -- on stage, on the road, and with the ladies -- provide ideal set pieces for Maher's tongue-in-cheek riffs and observations. With perfect-pitch delivery, in classic sardonic style, Maher gives us a bona fide look at these resilient comedians and the scumbag promoters, hostile audiences, and die-hard groupies who make up their warped and twisted world. Only Bill Maher could have written True Story. And lucky for us he did. Because True Story is hilarious. It's offensive. At times it's even touching. So sit back as Maher puts you stageside at the very birth of the comedy boom. You'll laugh in all the right places. Hey, it's a True Story.
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keithmalek
True Story: A Novel | Bill Maher

Readers who enjoyed this book might also enjoy "Running The Light" by Sam Tallent.

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ShananigansReads
True Story: A Novel | Bill Maher
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💯 #truth

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MinDea
True Story: A Novel | Bill Maher
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😆😆😆 #Truth My boyfriend loses me in the bookstore all the time. 😋

Cinfhen 😂😂😂 7y
RohitSawant 😂😂 7y
Dragon So true 😂 7y
SconsinBookyBadger So true! And a rare time I lost my nonreader sister in B&N! 😂😂🤣 7y
83 likes4 comments
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Purrfectpages
True Story: A Novel | Bill Maher
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Yeah_I_Read Yes!!! 7y
47 likes1 stack add1 comment
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BethM
True Story: A Novel | Bill Maher
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At least that's what they told me 😂

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keithmalek
True Story: A Novel | Bill Maher
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keithmalek
True Story: A Novel | Bill Maher

The book's opening quotation: They loved each other because they shared a dream...but they hated each other because there wasn't enough of it to go around.

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keithmalek
True Story: A Novel | Bill Maher

Great chapter title: You Better Be A Winner In This Business, Because If You're Not, It's Shit

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keithmalek
True Story: A Novel | Bill Maher

Great chapter title: When You Can't Light The Joint, You're Stoned Enough

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keithmalek
True Story: A Novel | Bill Maher

It was preposterous, but it wasn't any different from what he or any comic in any tragic situation would think: I'll get a good bit out of it. It sounded cruel, but maybe artists were just those people smart enough to always get a receipt for their pain.

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keithmalek
True Story: A Novel | Bill Maher

He pooh-poohed the orgasm as overrated--ten seconds of bliss, granted, but hardly worth losing all that control. To blow your load was to surrender your sword, and if an actual sword would go limp in battle, well, the warrior who brandished it would make pretty darn sure that didn't happen. So it was with sex. To lay down your sword was to lose the instrument of your power, the vicar of your will.