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Marcus Berkmann

    Marcus Berkmann ist bekannt für seine humorvollen Beobachtungen des Alltags. Sein Schreiben, das sich oft auf Themen wie Cricket, Kneipenquizze und das Älterwerden konzentriert, zeichnet sich durch trockenen Witz und sarkastische, aber liebevolle Einblicke aus. Er seziert mit unerschütterlicher Präzision die Details sozialer Gepflogenheiten und Routinen und deckt deren inhärente Absurdität auf. Die Leser werden seine Fähigkeit schätzen, Komik im Alltäglichen zu finden und sie mit einer einzigartig britischen Sensibilität zu präsentieren.

    Dumb Britain 2
    A Shed Of One's Own
    Zimmer Men
    Berkmann's Pop Miscellany
    Rain Men
    Berkmann's Cricketing Miscellany
    • The most hilarious book ever written about amateur cricket.

      Rain Men
    • Zimmer Men

      • 256 Seiten
      • 9 Lesestunden
      3,8(107)Abgeben

      The pains of the ageing cricketer revealed in the hilarious sequel to RAIN MEN (about the appalling Captain Scott Invitation XI - named after the model of heroic failure).

      Zimmer Men
    • A Shed Of One's Own

      • 256 Seiten
      • 9 Lesestunden
      3,5(13)Abgeben

      A hilarious book about male midlife, from the inimitable humour of Marcus Berkmann

      A Shed Of One's Own
    • Dumb Britain 2

      • 95 Seiten
      • 4 Lesestunden
      3,4(15)Abgeben

      More idiotic answers to quizzes as reported in Private Eye magazine.

      Dumb Britain 2
    • The Spectator Book of Wit, Humour and Mischief collects some of the magazine's drollest contributions of the past twenty-five years, bringing a sharp eye to bear on the strangenesses of modern life.

      The Spectator Book of Wit, Humour and Mischief
    • Ashes To Ashes

      • 352 Seiten
      • 13 Lesestunden
      3,1(10)Abgeben

      Marcus Berkmann's brilliant and hilarious account of the highs and lows (let's face it mainly lows) of watching Ashes cricket for 35 years

      Ashes To Ashes
    • For many men, middle age arrives too fast and without due warning. One day you are young, free and single; the next you are all washed up, and have weird tendrils of hair growing out of your ears. Marcus Berkmann isn't having it. Having marked a Significant Birthday by hiding under a duvet for six weeks, the author of the classic Rain Men finds some light in the all-consuming darkness. 'We may have lost our hair, our waistline or our way completely. But we have also gained a certain amount of guile and what some might call "gravitas" (and others world call "weight").'

      A Shed Of One's Own: Midlife Without the Crisis.