Men and Other Mammals
Jim Keeble
(Author)
21,000+ Reviews
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Description
Scott Barron seems to have it all -- a beautiful girlfriend, a dazzling career as a published poet, and a great future. In contrast, his younger brother Jes is a married, overweight, unpublished writer with a fondness for penguins. Then why is it that, to Scott, Jes' life always seems so much better? He finds out, but only after his girlfriend decides to split (just as he was about to say the 'L' word -- and almost mean it), he makes a fool of himself on the BBC, his mother suddenly dies, and his estranged father shows up -- a series of catastrophes that push him to the edge and then some. As Scott's self-centered world begins to unravel, he discovers that the key to a happy existence just might be found in a happy relationship. But before he can move on into a new life and a new love, he has to figure out how to get Norman II, a stolen penguin, back to the zoo. Men and Other Mammals is a hilarious and touching tale about figuring out what and who really matter in life. Keeble shows us that loving someone is a choice you must make every day for the rest of your life -- and that loving someone is often a lot harder than not having someone to love.
Product Details
Price
$21.99
Publisher
Grand Central Publishing
Publish Date
May 07, 2003
Pages
304
Dimensions
5.2 X 8.12 X 0.68 inches | 0.56 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780786888610
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Become an affiliateAbout the Author
Jim Keeble lives in London. Like his fictional characters, he likes to write poetry, has a wonderful brother, and visits the penguins at the zoo as often as he can. This is his first novel.
Reviews
"At Warren Street Station, a pretty girl gets on and sits down opposite me. I glance at her, then away, then to one side of her, then to the other side of her. Sometimes it's so hard being British. I'm sure if I was Italian, I would fix her with a lascivious stare until she could bare it no longer and either snog the gob off me, or slap me in the face and get her brothers to knife me in a darkened alley. Instead I glance six inches above her pretty blonde head, and almost fall off my seat. By the colored spaghetti of the London Underground map, is a poem. Underneath are two words: Scott Barron and a date (1971--). I want to scream out loud, 'That's Mine!' but I'm too self-conscious. So I just sit there, waiting for someone to glance up and read it. Two stops later, when I get out, no one has."
"Jim Keeble writes of romance and relationships with comic flair and touching vulnerability."
"Jim Keeble writes of romance and relationships with comic flair and touching vulnerability."