
Purchase
The Amorous Busboy of Decatur Avenue
Robert Klein
A Child of the Fifties Looks Back
Touchstone
May 2005
384 pages ISBN: 0684854880 Hardcover
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Non-Fiction Memoir
Dear Reader, When we asked the beloved
award-winning comedian and actor Robert Klein to write a
book, you can imagine our utter surprise when he told us
that he wanted to write about sixth-century Chinese pottery.
Thankfully, he hit a creative brick wall (since he doesn't
really know anything about pottery from China or anywhere
else). Then came similar failures to write books about sea
turtles, circumnavigation of the globe, building jet engines
at home, the sociology of chickens, or fungi of the
skin. Luckily, Mr. Klein's paramount concern was the
consumer. He knew that if we, his publishers, were going to
boldly ask you to purchase his book (see above for price),
he would have to write something so good, so worthwhile, so
meaningful as to make you want to send additional money to
your bookseller in gratitude for having allowed you to
partake in this reading experience. So Mr. Klein set
out to write about what he knows best: himself. This book is
about the adventures of a child who becomes a young man: how
he thinks and dreams and lusts and fears and laughs and
handles adversity. From the beginning of his
distinguished career as a comedian, Robert Klein established
himself as a pioneer in observational humor and razor-sharp
routines that are infectiously funny. Now -- for the first
time -- Klein brings his trademark humor and honesty to the
printed page. In this portrait of a comic as a young man,
Klein takes us back to the people and streets of his Bronx
neighborhood, the eccentric cast of characters in the
Catskills hotels and bungalow colonies where he worked, the
college dorms where he received more than an academic
education, the 1964 World's Fair where he fell in love, New
York City and Chicago in the 1960s as he developed his
talent, and Los Angeles just as he was about to embark on a
show business career. Throughout, Klein reveals the hilarity
of growing up and explores the mysteries and his own foibles
in sex and relationships. He recounts with wit and poignancy
losing his virginity with a prostitute, bringing home a
German girlfriend to his Jewish family, and the amorous
adventures of the busboy he once was. With an ego more
fragile than Chinese pottery, Robert Klein has written a
funny and evocative coming-of-age memoir -- well worth the
price (if we say so ourselves). Enjoy. All the
best, The Publisher
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