Call it coincidence if you will, but the last minute
decision of choosing to buy this book after sniffing every corner of the oxford
bookstore with 200 bucks in my pocket, seems like divine intervention right
now. “May I Hebb Your Attention Pliss” by bong cum blogger cum author Arnab Ray of greatbong.net was just the book that I needed to read to recharge my sarcasti-battery with
fresh green renewable non-polluting energy.
Published by Harper Collins as Non-Fiction/Humor, this book
is 237 pages of raw sarcasm. The author starts off with a few pages of formulaic
commercialism as to why you need to read the book along with three testimonials
from its satisfied readers/customers (fictional) and followed by a ‘nut’-shell
introduction about what the book is all about. All this is just an appetizer
for the happy meal that is to follow. The contents page tells you about the 14
chapters of the book with an amusing line for each.
The first chapter “Great National Terror Strategy”, is one
of my favorites where the author Arnab Ray stereotypes how a terror strike on
india is followed by the same conventional loop of media frenzy, people’s
agitations, politicians announcing relief packages, etc. before people forget
about it and another terror strike follows. It sets the tone for the rest of the
pages of the book, such that you’ll know that beyond all the humor and sarcasm,
every single line has an ironical similarity with reality. My second favorite
chapter is “An Indian Wedding” where the author narrates the story of how he went
through his own wedding’s ceremonial procedures, not depriving us of all the
witty yet dumb thoughts that he had on his mind.
The rest of the chapters are also fun to read as he talks
about how the toilet flush is something that annoys him the most, and reveals
his arcane secrets about how you can start a management institute or a
television serial of your own.
Overall, it’s a fun read for a pastime. If you’re planning
on a long journey or having a hectic week at the work field, you might want to
try this out. Its light reading, for the light hearted times. And it ends on a
nice note too, summing it all up to the fact that everyone in this world is
clawing for attention. And so, the name of the book.
Uphills:
1.
1. Loads of humor.
2.
2. Nicely stereotyped a lot of things about life –
NRIs to Sexual issues.
3.
3. Everything is in accordance to the theme of the
book, i.e., everything tastes humor – from the introduction to the epilogue.
Downhills:
1.
1. Not something you’d want to read at a stretch as
the light humor tends to become boring at times.
Xeno Rating: 7/10
Category: Non-Fiction Humor
8 January 2012 at 18:23
Here's one fun read I was looking for. Thanks Xeno. And nice way to write a review!
9 January 2012 at 12:44
@binu thomas:
thank you! :)
9 January 2012 at 22:56
I agree with both your uphills and downhills... some of the chapters are awesome and would leave you in splits but some are a little drag.