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Dave Gorman's Googlewhack Adventure

By: Dave Gorman
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Ebury Press
ISBN: 0091891965
ISBN-13: 9780091891961
Released: 01 Jan 2004
RRP: £10.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

An entertaining tale about how far a man will go to avoid work... - By: Leeloo, 24 Apr 2008
This was an enjoyable book to read. It's a book that just goes to show how many truly interesting people there are out there on the internet. It's often a book about unbelievable coincidences & how taking a chance can take you alll over the Globe. It's also a book about one man's attempt to avoid working, something I can sympathise with!

The pace of the book is good, particularly towards the end where the chapters are often only 2-3 pages long & it becomes a parade of entertaining, unusual & genuinely intriguing people. And it's definitely the people that make this book enjoyable & entertaining, rather than Gorman's need to complete this book. If anything, his constant attempts to engage our sympathy are a down point, if only a minor one.

I would certainly recommend this book to anyone who has enjoyed Gorman's other books. I would also recommend this to anyone after a light & entertaining read. I would definitely not recommend this book to anyone who finds works-shy people even the tiniest bit annoying.

An epic tale involving a beard, a tattoo and Google. - By: DangermouseZilla, 10 Dec 2007
I read this after thoroughly enjoying "Are you Dave Gorman?" & wasn't disappointed.

I've spoken with some people who felt this was weaker than the book of the previous adventure, & I would have to say that I preferred "Are you Dave Gorman" - but this is still a quality book, & one of the funniest I've ever read.

For those who don't know what this is about; Dave Gorman received an e-mail saying he's a Googlewhack, from a guy in Australia. Thinking this might be an insult, Dave Gorman e-mails the guy only to find out that a Googlewhack is where you enter two words in Google & only get 1 result. This seems like an easy thing to bag, but try it - it's anything but easy.

This kicks off an adventure where Dave aims to find Googlewhacks. He arranges to meet them & accepts a bet to find a chain of ten Googlewhacks. So he finds the owner of a Googlewhacked site, & get them to find a Googlewhack, he goes to meet them, & so on....

Dave forms relationships with people alll over the globe, by Googlewhacking his way around the world he makes some good friends - & this is the strength of the story. If the adventure was purely one of comedy then this would seem a bit hollow, but the human story is what makes this a magical read.

It's not alll plain sailing either, towards the end of the Googlewhack Adventure Dave is feeling down & doomed to failure, in a depressed rage he sends a spiteful e-mail to a vulnerable person & starts to regret it.

This is a book which can't be tied to a genre, it's neither a simple comedy book nor a travel book, it's not a biography either - although it reveals masses about the author.

I can't recommend enough that you read this book, & then perhaps enjoy the DVD of the Stage show around this amazing Googlewhack Adventure.

Brilliant - By: Drew Peacock, 27 Sep 2006
Very funny book about a fantatic little idea gone mad.
Some people can carry such adventures off (John Donoghue - Shakespeare My Butt!)
...some seem a little contrived to be purely 'natural'(Danny Walllace - Yes Man, Join Me Tony Hawks - Around Ireland with a Fridge)
Gorman is on fire here....very funny book & it flows. He appears a naturallly comic & impulsive person, & that is what makes the book for me. Are you Dave Gorman was good, but seemed to drag at the end. This is better, much better. Dave Gorman at his best (and consider getting the DVD too)
dave gorman - By: C. Reid, 08 Sep 2006
this is a great book to read & so easy to pick up at any time. its a must if you have lots of drunken nights out & lots of laughs!!
Dave Gorman is infectious ... - By: Somnambulist, 26 Jun 2006
Having read & seen Are You Dave Gorman, I was well accustomed to DG's inane ramblings. He is both mad & highly engaging. This book starts off with a basic precept of trying to write a novel, & getting nowhere (although I liked the sound of the concept) & like everybody, resorting to work-avoidance tactics - however DG takes this, as is his style, a stage further than we might!

The tone of the book is impersonal & entertaining, & fully vindicates the view that the digital age has not (fully) removed the souls of those who see the internet as a way of communicating with people. It mixes humour with sadness (his final contact in Australia) & by the end you are willing him on to the finish line.

DG takes a smalll idea, which isn't even his, & largesses it to the nth degree!

A great, quick read.