| 1 2 3 Next |
Loser Goes First: My Thirty-Something Years of Dumb Luck and Minor Humiliation
It all begins on Christmas morning, 1978. Dan Kennedy is ten years old and wants a black Gibson Les Paul guitar, the kind Peter Frampton plays. It will be his passport to the coolest (only) band in the neighborhood—Jokerz. He doesn’t get it. Instead, his parents present him with what they think he wants most, a real-estate loan calculator (called the Loan Arranger) and a maroon velour pullover shirt with a tan stripe across the chest. It is the first of what will become a lifetime of various-sized failures, misunderstandings, comical humiliations, and just plain silly choices that have dogged this “hipster Proust of youthful loserdom,” as author Jerry Stahl has so eloquently called Mr. Kennedy. Many people spend their lives searching for their true calling, the one thing at which they excel and which will catapult them to fame and fortune. For Dan Kennedy, author of the darkly comic memoir Loser Goes First, that talent is decidedly not rock and roll. Kennedy details a life spent pining for the glory of rock stardom as a junior high student, an Austin, Texas, open-mic failure, and at various grim stops along the way as he shoots for the big time without the burden of talent or the tedium of learning to play an instrument. Kennedy's talent is also not acting, although he lands a gig as an extra in Sleepless in Seattle that leads, much to his chagrin, to nothing at all. Even his scrupulously cultivated talent of being an indie scenester is torpedoed when he willingly accepts an audition to be an MTV VJ, only to have the tryout be an unmitigated disaster. Finally, Kennedy discovers a pair of latent abilities. He finds, after he's into his thirties, that he has a knack for advertising copywriting that sets him on the path to his first financial success almost accidentally. And in writing Loser Goes First, he reveals a talent for relating his own dumb moves and embarrassing fiascoes with an honesty and wit that is vividly entertaining. Loser Goes First approaches narrative structure with the same indecisive distracted quality that Kennedy used in his actual life and the result is a chronicle of Kennedy's first 33 years peppered generously with film treatments, bullet point lists, imagined dialogue, and other snippets that seem transcribed from a very clever notebook. While such meandering could be perceived as too self-consciously quirky, it matches the story and keeps the humor crisp. --John Moe
Dan’s hilarious and painfully awkward youth soon develops into a . . . uh . . . hilarious and painfully awkward adulthood. His first two choices for university are Yale (Lit or Drama) and Harvard (Business), so he reviews his high school transcripts and decides on Butte Community College in Oroville, California, where he studies for about four and a half weeks. We could go on here and describe in detail all of Dan’s good-natured stabs at ambition, but he, himself, sums it all up quite nicely: “If you’ve ever tried and failed miserably at being a rock star (no guitar/talent), a professional bass fisherman, an extra in the movie Sleepless in Seattle (guy drinking martini in bar while Tom Hanks makes a phone call), a Madison Avenue advertising executive, a clerk/towel person at a suburban health club (named Kangaroo Kourts), an espresso street-cart owner and operator (in the one neighborhood of that coffee-swilling town, Seattle, where, remarkably, no one really seems to drink coffee), a dot.com millionaire, an MTV VJ, or a forest fire fighter, this book is for you.”
Along the way, a few lessons are learned and we are treated to one of the most original, riotously funny, unsentimental, and offbeat memoirs in recent history. Dan’s a favorite in McSweeney’s and at the very popular Moth readings in New York City. We should be happy that he failed so miserably at so many things—and took notes!
- From: Amazon
- Posted: Sep-10-2006
This Dan Kennedy Is Not The "Glazer/Kennedy" Dan Kennedy
I bought this book thinking it would be an amusing insight into the life of the master of all copywriting gurus, Dan Kennedy. Well, while the writer of this book is not that Dan Kennedy and I was dissapointed at first, I did find the book very entertaining and this Dan Kennedy does indeed have...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: May-30-2006
Watch what you buy: There are TWO Dan Kennedys
There's the McSweeney's writer Dan Kennedy who wrote "Loser Goes First" and there's this "How to Kick Butt at Sales and Make Millions!" Dan Kennedy. Don't get the Kennedy's confused like Amazon does --- I sadly realized this after paying for a book about making millions from selling things to...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: May-17-2005
Dorks everywhere, unite!
Have you ever felt like you could conquer the world... if only that silly little thing called reality didn't get in the way? Dan Kennedy's wickedly funny life story is one that most of us can identify with, because at one time or another all of us have experienced painfully embarassing moments...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Jan-03-2005
Absolutely Hilarious
I highly recommend this book if you enjoy edgy, humourous story telling. At several points during Loser Goes First, I had to put the book down as I knew I was going to laugh uncontrollably in a public space and didn't want to look like a raving lunatic. I purposely read this book slowly so to...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Dec-12-2004
A funny memoir and enjoyable read
Dan Kennedy's first book, an autobiographical look at life, is a strong comedic effort which results in a light read you don't want to put down for long. He details growing up in Southern California and how various failures and near-successes were just par for the course in ending up in a...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Oct-11-2004
Loser? This one is a "Winner"!
I saw Dan Kennedy at a literary event called "Moth Stories" a long time ago at Mass MoCa and I finally read his book. He is just as funny on the written page as he is in person, but I have to say that he goes into other areas besides just being funny with his writing. I got a lot out of the...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Sep-13-2004
The Art of The Slacker
Dan Kennedy's memoir "Loser Goes First" is a warts-and-all look at the life of that most enduring literary character: The Slacker. I mean that respectfully.Kennedy describes in hilarious and wince-inducing detail his many travails, from receiving the wrong Christmas present at age ten to his...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Jan-08-2004
Hits close to home
Five minutes into reading this book, I felt like I was reading my own memoirs, if I had the motivation to do it. The procrastination, the job-hopping, the seemingly "wasted talent" of the author: yes, this could very well be my life story. When Kennedy fails to comprehend why his boss doesn't...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Nov-20-2003
The book is good....so read it
I read the book. It made me laugh.
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Nov-12-2003
Laugh Out Loud Hilarious!
From page one, I was already laughing out loud. This farcical memoir moves fast, incorporating hilariously imagined sequences along with Kennedy's already amusing life. I actually called friends on the phone so that I could recite some of my favorite parts to them. I recommend this to anyone...
Read full review | Report as inappropriateMoreStores
SimilarProducts
-
The Zombie Survival Guide: Complete Protection from the Living Dead
-
Me Talk Pretty One Day
-
The Book of General Ignorance
-
How to Take Over Teh Wurld: A LOLcat Guide 2 Winning
-
The Guinea Pig Diaries: My Life as an Experiment
-
Holidays on Ice: Stories
-
Belly Laughs: The Naked Truth about Pregnancy and Childbirth
-
Simon's Cat
-
An Inconvenient Book: Real Solutions to the World's Biggest Problems
-
I'm a Lebowski, You're a Lebowski: Life, The Big Lebowski, and What Have You







