Humour
(2 customer reviews)
Publication Date: 28 Sep 2024
More Lakeland Larks, Laughter and Lunacies is the sequel to Anna Nolans’s first book, both reflecting her Polish ebullience and penchant for irreverent satire and comic verses. More Lakeland Larks, Laughter and Lunacies can also be seen as a love letter to the Lake District – Nolan’s home and playground.
This exuberant and frolicsome book balances Nolan’s car-less Lakeland escapades and mishaps with her jocular musings and satirical asides. The latter touch on a wide range of topics, including the hilarities of culture clashes between native Britons and a foreigner in their midst, the quirks of human nature, the political shenanigans one can’t help but notice – and even some very funny grammatical errors!
More Lakeland Larks, Laughter and Lunacies is a series of humorous anecdotes and witty digressions richly interspersed with comic verses, with no particular chronology, which makes it perfect for being dipped in and out.
Robert Heinaman - 13 Nov, 2024
Anyone who enjoyed Anna Nolan's earlier book Lakeland, Larks, Laughter and Lunacies will also enjoy this volume which, like the first, recounts various adventures and crises she has experienced during her extensive explorations of England's Lake District. However, much of the book explores a variety of other topics as well, including some pungent commentary on British politics and an amusing incident involving her mother and cats. (By the way, Anna's mother, Maria Szubert, published an absorbing account of her life in Poland under the German and Soviet invasions, Between Black Death and Red Plague). Anna is also an English grammar fanatic, and one of the most enjoyable chapters supplies a small sample of the enormous number of hilarious grammatical blunders she has been collecting over many years.
Mike Addison - 07 Nov, 2024
From the review published in North Lakes Living by the News Editor of The Keswick Reminder, Mike Addison
Dedicated to her fellow Skiddaw u3a Roamers, Anna Nolan’s sequel to her first book is just as laugh-out-loud funny, continuing to chart her car-less Lake District escapades and mishaps interspersed with her jocular musings and satirical asides. Anna’s love of English grammar also shines through, and there is a particularly enjoyable chapter featuring her vast collection of howlers or, as she puts it, “unintentionally hilarious examples of dangling participles”. The author’s fun-loving personality shines through once again, and you cannot fail to smile along at her opinions on a range of subjects, including NHS dentistry – which she put into verse – and bus travel as well as her exuberant and frolicsome outings on the fells.