Is it really too much to ask? / Jeremy Clarkson.

By: Clarkson, Jeremy [author.]Material type: TextTextSeries: The world according to Clarkson ; volume 5.Publisher: London : Penguin Books, 2014Copyright date: ©2013Description: xvi, 464 pages ; 20 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781405914130; 1405914130Uniform titles: Sunday Times of London (Firm) Subject(s): Clarkson, Jeremy -- Anecdotes | English wit and humor | Great Britain -- Social life and customs -- 21st century -- Humor | Great Britain -- Social conditions -- 21st century -- HumorDDC classification: 828.9202 Summary: HUMOUR. Is It Really Too Much To Ask? is the fifth book in Jeremy Clarkson's bestselling The World According to Clarkson series. Well, someone's got to do it: in a world which simply will not see reason, Jeremy sets off on another quest to beat a path of sense through all the silliness and idiocy. And there's no knowing what might catch Jeremy's eye along the way. It could be: the merits of Stonehenge as a business model; why all meetings are a waste of time; the theft of the Queen's cows; one Norwegian man's unique approach to showing his gratitude; fitting a burglar alarm to a tortoise; or how. Lou Reed was completely wrong about what makes a perfect day Pithy and provocative, this is Clarkson at his best, taking issue with whatever nonsense gets in the way of his search for all that's worth celebrating.
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Originally published: London: Michael Joseph, 2013.

HUMOUR. Is It Really Too Much To Ask? is the fifth book in Jeremy Clarkson's bestselling The World According to Clarkson series. Well, someone's got to do it: in a world which simply will not see reason, Jeremy sets off on another quest to beat a path of sense through all the silliness and idiocy. And there's no knowing what might catch Jeremy's eye along the way. It could be: the merits of Stonehenge as a business model; why all meetings are a waste of time; the theft of the Queen's cows; one Norwegian man's unique approach to showing his gratitude; fitting a burglar alarm to a tortoise; or how. Lou Reed was completely wrong about what makes a perfect day Pithy and provocative, this is Clarkson at his best, taking issue with whatever nonsense gets in the way of his search for all that's worth celebrating.

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