
How To Travel With A Salmon & Other Essays
 A collection of âimpishly witty and ingeniously irreverentâ (The Atlantic) how-to essays that highlight the absurdities of modern life, from the author of The Name of the Rose
How to Travel With a Salmon is a highly engaging collection of what Umberto Eco calls his diario minimoâminimal diariesâafter the magazine column in which he began âpursuing the pathways of parody.â These essays are his playful but unfailingly accurate takes on militarism, computer jargon, Westerns, art criticism, librarians, bureaucrats, meals on airplanes, Amtrak trains, bad coffee, maniacal taxi drivers, express mail, multi-function watches, fax machines and cell phones, pornography, soccer fans, academia, andâlast but definitely not leastâthe authorâs own self.
âVery funny.â âThe New York Review of Books
 A collection of âimpishly witty and ingeniously irreverentâ (The Atlantic) how-to essays that highlight the absurdities of modern life, from the author of The Name of the Rose
How to Travel With a Salmon is a highly engaging collection of what Umberto Eco calls his diario minimoâminimal diariesâafter the magazine column in which he began âpursuing the pathways of parody.â These essays are his playful but unfailingly accurate takes on militarism, computer jargon, Westerns, art criticism, librarians, bureaucrats, meals on airplanes, Amtrak trains, bad coffee, maniacal taxi drivers, express mail, multi-function watches, fax machines and cell phones, pornography, soccer fans, academia, andâlast but definitely not leastâthe authorâs own self.
âVery funny.â âThe New York Review of Books
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 A collection of âimpishly witty and ingeniously irreverentâ (The Atlantic) how-to essays that highlight the absurdities of modern life, from the author of The Name of the Rose
How to Travel With a Salmon is a highly engaging collection of what Umberto Eco calls his diario minimoâminimal diariesâafter the magazine column in which he began âpursuing the pathways of parody.â These essays are his playful but unfailingly accurate takes on militarism, computer jargon, Westerns, art criticism, librarians, bureaucrats, meals on airplanes, Amtrak trains, bad coffee, maniacal taxi drivers, express mail, multi-function watches, fax machines and cell phones, pornography, soccer fans, academia, andâlast but definitely not leastâthe authorâs own self.
âVery funny.â âThe New York Review of Books



