The Best of Me

Time to Read
8 hrs 9 mins

Reading Time

8 hrs 9 mins

How long to read The Best of Me?

The estimated word count of The Best of Me is 122,140 words.

A person reading at the average speed of 250 words/min, will finish the book in 8 hrs 9 mins. At a slower speed of 150 words/min, they will finish it in 13 hrs 35 mins. At a faster speed of 450 words/min, they will finish it in 4 hrs 32 mins.

The Best of Me - 122,140 words
Reading Speed Time to Read
Slow 150 words/min 13 hrs 35 mins
Average 250 words/min 8 hrs 9 mins
Fast 450 words/min 4 hrs 32 mins
The Best of Me by David Sedaris
Authors
David Sedaris

More about The Best of Me

122,140 words

Word Count

for The Best of Me

400 pages

Pages
Hardcover: 400 pages

13 hours and 8 minutes

Audiobook length


Description

David Sedaris’s best stories and essays, spanning his remarkable career—as selected by the author himself For more than twenty-five years, David Sedaris has been carving out a unique literary space, virtually creating his own genre. A Sedaris story may seem confessional, but is also highly attuned to the world outside. It opens our eyes to what is at absurd and moving about our daily existence. And it is almost impossible to read without laughing.   Now, for the first time collected in one volume, the author brings us his funniest and most memorable work. In these stories, Sedaris shops for rare taxidermy, hitchhikes with a lady quadriplegic, and spits a lozenge into a fellow traveler’s lap. He drowns a mouse in a bucket, struggles to say “give it to me” in five languages, and hand-feeds a carnivorous bird.   But if all you expect to find in Sedaris’s work is the deft and sharply observed comedy for which he became renowned, you may be surprised to discover that his words bring more warmth than mockery, more fellow-feeling than derision. Nowhere is this clearer than in his writing about his loved ones. In these pages, Sedaris explores falling in love and staying together, recognizing his own aging not in the mirror but in the faces of his siblings, losing one parent and coming to terms—at long last—with the other.   Taken together, the stories in TheBest of Me reveal the wonder and delight Sedaris takes in the surprises life brings him. No experience, he sees, is quite as he expected—it’s often harder, more fraught, and certainly weirder—but sometimes it is also much richer and more wonderful.   Full of joy, generosity, and the incisive humor that has led David Sedaris to be called “the funniest man alive” (Time Out New York), The Best of Me spans a career spent watching and learning and laughing—quite often at himself—and invites readers deep into the world of one of the most brilliant and original writers of our time.