Book Review: David Rakoff’s Don’t Get Too Comfortable : The Indignities of Coach Class, The Torments of Low Thread Count, The Never- Ending Quest for Artisanal Olive Oil, and Other First World Problems

Posted February 23, 2014 by Kathy Davie in

I received this book for free from in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

Book Review: David Rakoff’s Don’t Get Too Comfortable : The Indignities of Coach Class, The Torments of Low Thread Count, The Never- Ending Quest for Artisanal Olive Oil, and Other First World Problems

Don't Get Too Comfortable


in Hardcover edition on September 20, 2005 and has 240 pages.

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A series of 15 essays on the excess in our culture.

My Take

It’s well worth reading for Rakoff’s use of words as he has a beautiful way of writing whether he’s dishing or dashing his topic or himself. In general, he dishes himself, which I suspect is part of what attracts his fans. Each essay addresses a variety of issues as Rakoff leapfrogs from negative to positive and back again. History, politics, environment, consumerism, the shallowness and depth of the individual. And Rakoff. And he makes it work.

I can’t agree with the book description as I don’t find it “bitingly funny” nor is he “mercilessly skewering”. Then again, maybe I’m simply more vicious…*shrugs shoulders*…

In this particular book, his essays are the result of his field trips into trying on different roles or simply investigating. There’s his short stint as a cabana boy in Miami, exploring life after death and the possibilities of plastic surgery in others, the outrageous excesses of the Concorde with the contrasting down-home qualities of Hooter Air, making fun of our obsession with beautiful food and contrasting it with snobbish superiority over people in homeless shelters, his praise for Steve Brill’s naturalist forays into Central Park combine with the Catholic Church and Linnaeus while regretting how out-of-date Brill’s ambitions are, and his exploration of fasting with his candid experiences.

I do love his honest willingness to let it all hang out whether it’s his decision to become a citizen of the U.S. and what is involved, his grandiose visions of his superior aid as a cabana boy — you can’t help but laugh with him as you imagine the same heroic achievements for yourself!

The silliness of hanging around outside for the Today show, the joys of crafting — I can definitely understand how Rakoff feels about this one!, and the craziness of Paris fashion week — his revenge on Karl Lagerfeld was a vicious paragraph. I suspect I most enjoyed his foray into the scavenger hunt, and I do wish he’d finished at the Midnight Madness. His thoughts on the Puppetry of the Penis were both hilariously funny and depressing as it describes the genital origami, blending it with his thoughts on 9/11.

Ooh, Mrs. Bush’s comment about ignoring the deaths of soldiers in Iraq seems much on a par with Hilary Clinton’s dismissal of the soldiers dying for their country, ignored in Benghazi. It’s too bad his insight into the Log Cabin Republicans’ strategies had to be right. The years they lost…sigh… I have to go along with Rakoff on Robert Knight. Disgusting and stupid. Christening him as the “Vaginal Punisher” seemed appropriate, jerk.

I found it odd that in one essay he found servitude by others disgusting, but embraces it in yet another.

It appears to be a general theme of excess that refers to America’s over-proportionate use of world resources. And he does make a few references here and there, it reads, however, as more of an excess in dreams and fears.

The Cover and Title

The cover could be considered an excess of red — the background — and uncomfortable with the Louis XIVth-style chair. You’d be even more uncomfortable if you were sitting in that chair and watching the hand saw cut a circle in the floor around you!

I’m not sure how the title fits unless Don’t Get Too Comfortable is a reminder that Rakoff is holding up a mirror for himself and the reader.