In another, he plays along with staffers at his dad’s nursing home who think he’s comedian Dave Chappelle. In one essay, he visits a gun range and marvels that they sell boxer briefs with a holster in the back. Sedaris started down this path with his 2018 collection, “Calypso.” And four years later, amid an unrelenting pandemic, racial unrest and ever-more-divisive politics, there’s even more to be gloomy about.Īs usual, Sedaris highlights the random weirdness and hilarity of modern life. But the tone here is more somber, even melancholy, as he explores topics like gun violence, aging, and the sudden but not wholly unexpected death of his 98-year-old father. His newest collection, the ironically titled “Happy-Go-Lucky,” is just as funny and irreverent as his previous works.
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