Reviews
"A charming, funny recounting of growing up in Des Moines during the sleepy 1950s. Bryson combines nostalgia, sharp wit and a dash of hyperbole to recreate his childhood in the rural Midwest. A great, fun read, especially for Baby Boomers nostalgic for the good old days." Kirkus Reviews *Starred* "While many memoirs convey a bittersweet nostalgia, Bill Bryson's loving look at his childhood inThe Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kidis genuinely sweet. Framed within young Bryson's fantasy of being a superhero, it matches the author's sparkling wit with his vivid, candid memories of 1950s America. Adding a healthy dose of social history, Bryson tells a larger story, with vignettes that reveal the gap between America's postwar glow and its underlying angst. Bryson also touchingly recalls his father's career as a sportswriter, his mother's awkward experiments with cooking and the outrageous adventures of his infamous traveling companion, Stephen Katz." Publishers Weekly, Fall Preview "Bill Bryson's laugh-out-loud pilgrimage through his Fifties childhood in heartland America is a national treasure. It's full of insights, wit, and wicked adolescent fantasies." Tom Brokaw, NBC News "Bryson recounts the world of his younger self, buried in comic books in the Kiddie Corral at the local supermarket, resisting civil defense drills at school, and fruitlessly trying to unravel the mysteries of sex. His alter ego, the Thunderbolt Kid, born of his love for comic-book superheroes and the need to vaporize irritating people, serves as an astute outside observer of life around him. His family's foibles are humorously presented, from his mother's burnt, bland cooking to his father's epic cheapness. The larger world of 1950s America emerges through the lens of 'Billy's' world, including the dark underbelly of racism, the fight against communism, and the advent of the nuclear age." Library Journal "Travel humorist Bryson took a decisive stand regarding his hometown almost 20 years ago when he published the story "Fat Girls in Des Moines" inGrantamagazine. Now the author delves more deeply into his midwestern roots in a bittersweet laugh-out-loud recollection of his growing-up years. This affectionate portrait wistfully recalls the bygone days ofBurns and Allenand downtown department stores but with a good-natured elbow poke to the ribs." Booklist Reviews "Takes us on yet another amiable ramble through terrain viewed with his characteristic mixture of bemused wit, acerbic astonishment and sweet benevolence…we come closest to the real Bryson in this, his first true memoir…encompasses so much of human experience that you want to smile and sob at once…Bryson's evocation of an era is near perfect: tender, hilarious and true. " The Times (UK) "A wittily incisive book about innocence, and its limits, but in no sense an innocent book…Like Alan Bennett, another ironist posing as a sentimentalist, Bryson can play the teddy-bear and then deliver a sudden, grizzly-style swipe…might tell us as much about the oddities of the American way as a dozen think-tanks. " Independent "Always witty and sometimes hilarious…wonderfully funny and touching." Literary Review (UK) "A funny, effortlessly readable, quietly enchanted memoir…Bryson also provides a quirky social history of