â A hugely heartfelt, funny, kind, fascinating, human and clever book â ALAIN DE BOTTON â Magnificent. Breathtaking. And shockingly rare ⌠another one-sitting wonderâ STEPHEN FRY
David Baddiel would love there to be a God. He has spent a lot of time fantasising about how much better life would be if there actually was such a thing as a Superhero Dad who chased off Death. Unfortunately for him, there isnât. Or at least, that is Baddielâs view in this book, which argues that it is indeed the very intensity of his, and everyone elseâs, desire for God to exist that proves His non-existence. Anything so deeply wished-for we will, considers Baddiel, make real. The admission of his own divine yearnings makes for a book that is more vulnerable â and more understanding of the value and power of religion â than most atheist polemics. A philosophical essay that utilises Baddielâs trademarks of comedy, storytelling and personal asides, The God Desire offers a highly readable new perspective on the most ancient of debates.
Reviews
âThis is such a fabulous book. Honest, powerful, moving. Canât remember ever liking a book âin praise of atheismâ as much as this. Many atheists donât really get religion. David Baddiel absolutely does.â Giles Fraser
Praise for Jews Donât Count:
âJews Donât Count is a supreme piece of reasoning and passionate, yet controlled, argument. From his first sentence, the energy, force and conviction of Baddielâs writing and thinking will transfix youâŚas readable as an airport thrillerâŚa masterpiece.â STEPHEN FRY
âI donât think I have ever been so grateful to anyone for writing a book. Baddielâs Jews Donât Count is incisive, urgent, surprisingly funny and short. Itâs also a beautiful piece of publishing. It needs to be readâ JAY RAYNER
âBrilliant, furious, uncomfortable, funny. Essential reading.â SIMON MAYO
âI'm about a quarter of the way into this thus far and it's very well argued and written. It's a book you know the author HAD to write, and those are the best booksâ JON RONSON
âI only big up work I really believe is good and this is extra-ordinarily good. And importantâ JONATHAN ROSS
âThis is brilliant â funny and furious, mostly at the same timeâ MARINA HYDE
âA convincing and devastating charge sheetâ Dominic Lawson, Sunday Times
âIt is so gripping â I read it in a single sittingâ Stephen Bush, The Times
âA fascinating book, I urge you to read itâ Piers Morgan
âI really think itâs a great book ⌠the real triumph is its tone, its straightforwardness, and its spectacular tact and witâ Adam Phillips, author of Monogamy
âFunny, complex and intellectually satisfying â a really good piece of workâ Frankie Boyle
âJust so brilliantly argued and written, I was completely swept alongâ Hadley Freeman
âDavid Baddiel is a brilliant thinker and writer. Even when I disagree with him â especially when I disagree with him â I feel profound gratitude for his intellectual and moral clarity. This is a brave and necessary book.â Jonathan Safran Foer
About the author
David Baddiel was born in 1964 in Troy, New York, but grew up and lives in London. He is a comedian, television writer, columnist and author of four novels, of which the most recent is The Death of Eli Gold.
â A hugely heartfelt, funny, kind, fascinating, human and clever book â ALAIN DE BOTTON â Magnificent. Breathtaking. And shockingly rare ⌠another one-sitting wonderâ STEPHEN FRY
David Baddiel would love there to be a God. He has spent a lot of time fantasising about how much better life would be if there actually was such a thing as a Superhero Dad who chased off Death. Unfortunately for him, there isnât. Or at least, that is Baddielâs view in this book, which argues that it is indeed the very intensity of his, and everyone elseâs, desire for God to exist that proves His non-existence. Anything so deeply wished-for we will, considers Baddiel, make real. The admission of his own divine yearnings makes for a book that is more vulnerable â and more understanding of the value and power of religion â than most atheist polemics. A philosophical essay that utilises Baddielâs trademarks of comedy, storytelling and personal asides, The God Desire offers a highly readable new perspective on the most ancient of debates.
Reviews
âThis is such a fabulous book. Honest, powerful, moving. Canât remember ever liking a book âin praise of atheismâ as much as this. Many atheists donât really get religion. David Baddiel absolutely does.â Giles Fraser
Praise for Jews Donât Count:
âJews Donât Count is a supreme piece of reasoning and passionate, yet controlled, argument. From his first sentence, the energy, force and conviction of Baddielâs writing and thinking will transfix youâŚas readable as an airport thrillerâŚa masterpiece.â STEPHEN FRY
âI donât think I have ever been so grateful to anyone for writing a book. Baddielâs Jews Donât Count is incisive, urgent, surprisingly funny and short. Itâs also a beautiful piece of publishing. It needs to be readâ JAY RAYNER
âBrilliant, furious, uncomfortable, funny. Essential reading.â SIMON MAYO
âI'm about a quarter of the way into this thus far and it's very well argued and written. It's a book you know the author HAD to write, and those are the best booksâ JON RONSON
âI only big up work I really believe is good and this is extra-ordinarily good. And importantâ JONATHAN ROSS
âThis is brilliant â funny and furious, mostly at the same timeâ MARINA HYDE
âA convincing and devastating charge sheetâ Dominic Lawson, Sunday Times
âIt is so gripping â I read it in a single sittingâ Stephen Bush, The Times
âA fascinating book, I urge you to read itâ Piers Morgan
âI really think itâs a great book ⌠the real triumph is its tone, its straightforwardness, and its spectacular tact and witâ Adam Phillips, author of Monogamy
âFunny, complex and intellectually satisfying â a really good piece of workâ Frankie Boyle
âJust so brilliantly argued and written, I was completely swept alongâ Hadley Freeman
âDavid Baddiel is a brilliant thinker and writer. Even when I disagree with him â especially when I disagree with him â I feel profound gratitude for his intellectual and moral clarity. This is a brave and necessary book.â Jonathan Safran Foer
About the author
David Baddiel was born in 1964 in Troy, New York, but grew up and lives in London. He is a comedian, television writer, columnist and author of four novels, of which the most recent is The Death of Eli Gold.