Patricia Marx is a writer for the New Yorker, former writer for Saturday Night Live, and the first woman elected to the Harvard Lampoon. Her books include the novel Him Her Him Again The End of Him, the children's book Now Everybody Really Hates Me, and the humor book How To Regain Your Virginity. After writing this book, Patty Marx got so smart she changed her name to Patricia Marx.
"A short and giddy book ...both the author and her humor are
sharper than they initially let on."
--Boston Globe
"A smart, often laugh-out-loud exploration of the human
brain...hilariously sophisticated, often literally
mind-boggling."--Shelf Awareness
"Both heart and brains...Since one of the meditation techniques
mentioned [in LET'S BE LESS STUPID] is laughter, merely reading
this book could help your hippocampus feel the burn. Start with
Marx's suggestions, then plot your personal brain boot camp since
sadly, liposuction is not an option for shaping up an aging
brain."
--BookPage
"Does laughing out loud make you smarter? Scientists need to study
the brains of people right after they've read anything by Patricia
Marx."--Andy Borowitz
"Equal parts sarcasm, silliness and smarts...Throughout,
'Middle-Age Mad Libs' mock brainteasers and ludicrous quizzes are
filled with sharp sendups of our cultural obsessions... anyone
clever enough to write Let's Be Less Stupid is clearly still firing
on all cylinders."--NPR Books
"Frothy, funny, and abounding in quizzes, exercises, and
questionnaires...A sly, irreverent take on the latest obsessions
regarding self-improvement."--Kirkus
"I've long had a nagging suspicion that I'm getting stupider by the
day. But not until giving myself over to the program put forth in
this book--call it "Patty Marx's Bootcamp for the Brain"TM--did I
fully grasp the extent of my cognitive decline. I can't remember
most of what's in it, but I can say that it's the feel-good read of
the season. Especially for people who don't know what season it
is."--Meghan Daum
"If you had a conversation with your funniest, smartest friend
about your secret fear of losing your mind, this is what it would
sound like. Marx's book is hilarious, engaging, and jammed with
wonderfully oddball science, delivered with her inimitable wit. A
must-read for anyone who has a brain."--Susan Orlean
"In this juggernaut trek through various scientific labyrinths, Ms.
Marx proves that it takes a huge and powerful brain to find out how
stupid you are. Of course, she fails -- in fact seems to lose
interest in that dismal quest about halfway through -- but so what;
her purpose is to squeeze laughs out of anything and everything she
does, or finds out, or screws up. What a brain, and thus what a
book."--Bruce McCall
"Much the way the movie 'Inside Out' does with its 11-year-old
protagonist, Ms. Marx takes us on a guided tour of the inner
workings of her head... you can dip in and out, the way you might
take an occasional swig of whiskey (or whatever works) as a
pick-me-up...Ms. Marx might not be everyone's cup of tea. But she
is mine."--New York Times
"Patricia Marx is my favorite kind of humorist. A funny one."
--Omnivoracious
"Patty Marx has plenty of advice to help you keep your mind young-
while acknowledging how hopeless the dream of maintaining a young
brain really is. So, don't think about it; let your mind go blank;
look at the pictures, and laugh out loud."--Bill Nye
"Patty Marx is one of the funniest, smartest people I know. I am
pretty sure I have gotten smarter, or at least less stupid, since
reading this book. You will too!"--Roz Chast
"Patty Marx's new book on the mind and its slippages is one more
welcome Marxian performance: fascinating truths, offered with wit,
and wonderful wit, with truth inside it."--Adam Gopnik
"Patty Marx's unending wit, comedy, insight, and panic are here on
display in her new, exciting, book."--Steve Martin
"Smarten up with Marx's quizzes, brainteasers, anecdotes, and
self-help guides while giving your funny bone a witty
workout."--Elle
"This 'sub-primer' on the neuroscience of intelligence and memory
by New Yorker staff writer and master humorist Patricia Marx
delivers salutary cognitive jolts amid the general hilarity... If
you regularly arrive in rooms with no memory of what you were
looking for, this one is for you."--Nature
"This book is hilarious. In gleefully mocking her own feeble brain,
Patty Marx reveals herself to be downright brilliant. Predictably,
her humor is packed with merriment, fizzy wit and belly laughs, but
here's the surprise: she brings truckloads of knowledge to her
complex subject and even the occasional flash of wisdom."--John
Lithgow
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