Pistache (Paperback)
  • Pistache (Paperback)
zoom

Pistache (Paperback)

(author)
1 Review Sign in to write a review
£9.99
Paperback 112 Pages
Published: 03/06/2010
Free UK delivery on orders over £25, otherwise £2.99
  • In stock

Usually dispatched within 1-2 days

Free UK delivery on orders over £25, otherwise £2.99
  • This item has been added to your basket

pistache (pis-tash): a friendly spoof or parody of another's work. [Deriv uncertain. Possibly a cross between pastiche and p**stake.]

From Thomas Hardy's football report to Dan Brown's visit to the cash dispenser, the work of the great and the not-so-great is here sent up with little hope of coming down.

Most of these pieces began their life on Radio Four's The Write Stuff, but have been retooled for the printed page. Others, such as Martin Amis's first day at Hogwarts, have been written specially for this collection.

Philip Larkin's Lines in Celebration of the Queen Mother's 115th Birthday, first banned, then cut by the BBC, appears in its entirety for the first time.

This is not a book for the faint-hearted or the downstairs lavatory. It is a book for the bedside table of someone you cannot live without.

Publisher: Cornerstone
ISBN: 9780099549499
Number of pages: 112
Weight: 85 g
Dimensions: 198 x 129 x 6 mm


MEDIA REVIEWS

Unforgivably witty - Sunday Telegraph

Faulks picks up the big names of the Western canon and plonks them down mercilessly in the most unexpected places - The Times

You may also be interested in...

A Wayne in a Manger
Added to basket
Damn You, Autocorrect!
Added to basket
The Wicked Wit of Queen Elizabeth II
Added to basket
Out of the Woods But Not Over the Hill
Added to basket
The Great Book Of British Useless Info
Added to basket
The Book of Football Quotations
Added to basket
The Timewaster Letters
Added to basket
The Mammoth Book of Irish Humour
Added to basket
Chocolate and Cuckoo Clocks
Added to basket
The Ultimate Book of Heroic Failures
Added to basket
The Thurber Carnival
Added to basket
Insults Every Man Should Know
Added to basket
Do Ants Have Arseholes?
Added to basket

“Parodyssey”

What’s the collective noun for parodies? A Vanessa? A Vanescence? Well, whatever it is, that’s what we have here, in Sebastian Faulks’s sprightly and amusing ‘Pistache’. Pronounced ‘piss-tash’, apparently. Not... More

Paperback edition
Helpful? Upvote 87

Please sign in to write a review

Your review has been submitted successfully.