ebook / ISBN-13: 9781472277053

Price: £10.99

ON SALE: 8th July 2021

Genre: Coins, Banknotes, Medals, Seals (numismatics) / Humour

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I’d managed to puncture a hole between our universe and the parallel one where all the celebrities lived.”

‘Effortlessly funny and human’ Daily Mail


Adam Andrusier spent his childhood in pursuit of autographs. After writing to every famous person he could think of, from Frank Sinatra to Colonel Gaddafi, he soon jostled with the paparazzi at stage doors and came face-to-face with the most famous people on the planet.

For young Adam, autographs were a backstage pass to a world beyond his chaotic family home in Pinner, and his Holocaust-obsessed father. They provided a special connection to a world of glamour and significance lying just beyond his reach.

But as Adam turned from collector to dealer, learning how to spot a fake from the real deal, he discovered that in life, as in autographs, not everything is as it first appears. When your obsession is a search for the authentic, what happens when you discover fraudulence in your own family?

The Autograph Hunter is a hilarious and moving account of discovering that idols are mortals. It’s a story of growing up, forgiveness and discovering a place in the world.

‘I love this book. It is wise, funny, surprising, touching, and wonderful company.’
JONATHAN SAFRAN FOER

This book was previously titled Two Hitlers and a Marilyn.

Reviews

Beautifully written
Maureen Lipman
Hilarious and moving.
David Baddiel
Madcap and thoroughly engaging, Adam Andrusier's vivid memoir brings to mind the early Philip Roth. This is a book of antic comedy that resonates and intrigues
Lisa Appignanesi
A comic and poignant memoir about growing up in the suburbs, fandom, stalking Ronnie Barker, and much more. A funny, moving read
Zadie Smith
A fabulously interesting book and incredibly pleasurable to read. Very funny and strangely entrancing. It is about so much, but effortlessly
Adam Phillips
Adam Andrusier has created that rare thing: a memoir which delivers the coming-of-age but also reaches far beyond. The writing here about family is excellent, the characters and scenes memorable, but from the first they're engaged also in a history. Two Hitlers and a Marilyn takes in the world as widely as possible, always searching for significance and connection
David Vann
At times hilarious, at others heartbreaking, Andrusier's memoir provides a fascinating insight into obsession
John Boyne
I love this book. It is wise, funny, surprising, touching, and wonderful company
Jonathan Safran Foer
Andrusier has a genuine comic gift and he's remarkably technically adept. You could easily assume he had been writing this sort of stuff for years.
Daily Mail
Offering a warm, witty and poignant glimpse into the past, Two Hitlers and a Marilyn is a memoir of fandoms, forgiveness, growing up and letting go.
Culturefly
A brilliant, ridiculously funny book
Robert Popper