My Autobiography
Ratings7
Average rating4.4
The hysterical, shocking and incredibly intimate memoir from one of the most original and unique comedians alive today. From growing up in a run-down Glaswegian council estate to finding a certain renown as the writer, director, editor and star of his own multi-award-winning sketch show, nothing about Limmy's life has been conventional. From an early age, he always felt like the odd one out, as if he'd missed a crucial lesson in life that everyone else had attended. And that feeling of oddness has never left him. He's always stumbled down his own, peculiar path. From early run-ins with the police as a teenager, running away from a helicopter, to a drink addiction that saw him nearly piss away his life and career, Limmy has struggled with demons, good and bad, for as long as he can remember. As much as he'd love to kill them off, they are also the fuel for his own, very particular sense of humour which has made him one of the most respected and mercurial comic talents alive today. This is no run-of-the-mill comedian's memoir. There is real introspection here, a real quest to try and understand what it is that makes him tick, and why he does the self-destructive things he does. What emerges is a startling and captivating, and unsurprisingly very funny, story of a down-to-earth weirdo with an extraordinary talent, and who has the scars, mental and physical, to show for it.
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Many memoirs would be a plummet in gravity and craft coming off of reading Wild Swans. I was sorrowed to know the threshold for life moments to reflect on. The comedy chapter was what I was after and I appreciated the part about meditation.