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The Bible According to Spike Milligan
The Bible According to Spike Milligan
Sep 30, 2024 5:34 AM

Author:Spike Milligan,Spike Milligan

The Bible According to Spike Milligan

Spike Milligan's legendary war memoirs are a hilarious and subversive first-hand account of the Second World War, as well as a fascinating portrait of the formative years of this towering comic genius, most famous as writer and star of The Goon Show. They have sold over 4.5 million copies.

Penguin presents the unabridged, downloadable, audiobook edition of The Bible According to Spike Milligan, written and read by Spike Milligan.

The Old Testament: but more mad, more merry, more... Milligan!

"And God said, Let there be light; and there was light, but Eastern Electricity Board said He would have to wait until Thursday to be connected."

There have been many interpretations of the Old Testament over the centuries but never one quite like this. Spike Milligan has rewritten, in his own inimitable style, many of the best-known stories of the Old Testament, featuring characters like King "my brain hurts" Solomon, the great oaf of a giant Goliath and the lesser-known crossword clue, Hushai the Archite.

Believers and non-believers alike will enjoy this hilarious re-working, where the jokes, jests and jibes tumble over each other from Chapter One, Verse One until kingdom come.

Reviews

That absolutely glorious way of looking at things differently. A great man

—— Stephen Fry

A totally original comedy writer

—— Michael Palin

Close in stature to Lewis Carroll and Edward Lear in his command of the profound art of nonsense

—— Guardian

Manifestly a genius, a comic surrealist genius and had no equal

—— Terry Wogan

Luisa’s bold and wonderful personality bursts forth from this book ... it’s touching, encouraging and filled with Luisa’s great observations about how the patriarchy makes victims of us all and how silly that is.

—— Funny Women

Riotously entertaining comic memoir.

—— Bookseller

Raucously funny.

—— Uncut

A classic tale made fresh.

—— Ransom Note

Lonely Boy is unique amongst rock star memoirs: Jones is the real deal.

—— Esquire

Gem.

—— The Spectator

Frank and engaging.

—— The Beat

Perhaps I've been biased by a forty-year devotion to the Pistols, but having just turned its final page, Lonely Boy only seems like the best book since The Bible.

—— Classic Rock

An enthralling, engaging human story: harrowing, hilarious and often touching, but above all, life-affirming.

—— Vive Le Rock

Eminently readable.

—— TeamRock

One of the best autobiographies I have ever read

—— On: Yorkshire Magazine

This first-hand account from the band’s guitarist captures the significance of the band through his own eyes, but also delves deep into his difficult childhood. Jones is a one-off: hilarious, eccentric, painfully honest and 100% Lahndahn.

—— TeamRock

Defiantly populist ... Dominic Sandbrook zestfully charts the route that has taken Britain from 'workshop of the world' to 'cultural superpower' ... as Sandbrook rightly insists, 'we still live in the shadow of the Victorians

—— Boyd Tonkin , Independent

Brilliant.

—— A N Wilson , The Tablet

An engaging and very accessible history book about our modern artistic achievements that, provocatively, also debunks some of the very icons it praises.

—— Simon Copeland , The Sun

I loved this book about British culture, partly because there's so much in it, and partly because of the brilliant way the author joins the dots ... Sandbrook gets us thinking about cinema, art, country houses, Tolkein, Doctor Who, and, superbly, much more.

—— William Leith , Evening Standard

An entertaining trawl through British culture ... [Sandbrook] has produced a book that is not only thoroughly enjoyable to read, but also crammed with as many serious insights as a shelf of academic studies

—— The Times

It's a great premise, and I dived into, and splashed around in, this book gleefully at first. Here were lucid and often amusing expositions on the work of Lennon and McCartney, Ian Fleming, JRR Tolkien, Christie ... in his books on Britain in the 1950s and 60s, Sandbrook has covered some of this ground before. But he doesn't repeat himself, and his scope is wider than heretofore - he notices, for instance, how ingrained Charles Dickens's influence is, still, in popular entertainment ... It would be impossible to please everyone. But when Sandbrook is pleasing, he is very pleasing indeed.

—— Nick Lezard , Guardian
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