Price: $28.00 as of 11/24/2009 18:43 EST
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Binding: Audio CD
Dewey Decimal Number: 808
EAN: 9781600244926
Edition: Unabridged
Format: Audiobook, Unabridged
ISBN: 1600244920
Label: Hachette Audio
Manufacturer: Hachette Audio
Number Of Items: 2
Publication Date: October 10, 2008
Publisher: Hachette Audio
Studio: Hachette Audio
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Editorial Review:
Product Description: A brand-new and revised edition of the hilarious guide to the national anti-holiday made famous by Seinfeld, complete with never-before-seen material, photos, and illustrations on how to prepare and enjoy your very own Festivus.
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
This is the worst book I have ever read. It tries to be funny and somewhat informative but fails miserably on both counts. It takes less than an hour to read. It seems as if it were written in about that amount of time.If the author has any decency he would refund my money.
Rating: -
I placed my order and it arrived in a few days. This book was purchased for a Christmas present and the recipient thought it was great. Great service!!
Rating: -
Allen Salkin is the most creative, quirky writer today. He takes Festivus and gives us a super clean, fun holiday that "the rest of us" can enjoy. Particularly if you can't stand the holidays, you can turn to Festivus - it's like group therapy for holiday nay-sayers. But I love Salkin's writing and follow his work closely. I suggest you dig into this fantastic piece of work, and by the way, it's a GREAT stocking stuffer too!!
Rating: -
Wow, did Allen Salkin get lucky. He must be related to Jerry Stiller or something. From his writing, I'd say that JS's involvement is the only reason he got a book deal.
This book reads like a 9th grade term paper-- and a poor one at that.
What a lame book!
Rating: -
Not the worst book I've read this year, but in the bottom 20%, this allegedly humorous tome explores a generally faux holiday. Plotlines from old sitcoms generally don't make for the most inspired book, that's why there's not a book about Lucille Ball running amok in a factory.
I don't begrudge the authors for attempting to jump on the Seinfeld bandwagon, but guys - that bandwagon left the station 4 years ago.
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