Lost at Sea: The Jon Ronson Mysteries

£10.40£12.30 (-15%)

Frequently hilarious, sometimes disturbing, always entertaining, these fascinating stories of the chaos that lies on the fringe of our daily lives will have you wondering just what we’re capable of.

This updated edition of Lost at Sea includes the complete text of Frank: The True Story that Inspired the Movie.

Jon Ronson has been on patrol with America’s real-life superheroes and to a UFO convention in the Nevada desert with Robbie Williams. He’s met a man who tried to split the atom in his kitchen and asked a conscious robot if she’s got a soul.

Fascinated by madness, strange behaviour and the human mind, Jon has spent his life exploring mysterious events and meeting extraordinary people. Collected from various sources (including the Guardian and GQ) Lost at Sea features the very best of his adventures.

Portions of this book have appeared previously, in slightly different form, in Out of the Ordinary, What I Do, the Guardian and GQ.

Read more

Buy product
EAN: 2000000422084 SKU: 559E13AA Category:

Additional information

Publisher

Main Market edition (31 Dec. 2015), Picador

Language

English

Paperback

560 pages

ISBN-10

1447264711

ISBN-13

978-1447264712

Reading age

18 years and up

Dimensions

13.2 x 3.6 x 19.7 cm

Average Rating

4.14

07
( 7 Reviews )
5 Star
28.57%
4 Star
57.14%
3 Star
14.29%
2 Star
0%
1 Star
0%

Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.

7 Reviews For This Product

  1. 07

    by Ian Chapman-Curry

    I’ve been a fan of Jon Ronson since reading Them: Adventures with Extremists. He has a highly idiosyncratic writing style that really appeals; he is half childlike wonderment and half neurotic, sceptical journalist. He almost never comes across as a judgemental writer and always tries to understand and empathise with his subjects. Perhaps it is this willingness to believe or at least try to believe that means he gets to know some of life’s stranger characters. Lost at Sea is stuffed with strange characters. From Noel Edmonds and the devotees of Deal or No Deal to Robby Williams and the true believers of alien abduction.

    This is, in reality, a collection of Ronson’s writings from the past few years – some of the articles are dated so that they refer to the start of the recession in 2008, for example. So if you’ve been following Ronson in print, you might be disappointed that there is nothing new here. But, if you haven’t, and you enjoy Ronson’s style then you’ll be utterly gripped.

    I personally finished this in a series of concentrated bursts over a 24 hour period. If you haven’t come across Ronson yet then you might like his writing if the weird and wonderful interests you or if you like the documentary style of Louis Theroux (who Ronson is inevitably compared with).

  2. 07

    by Amazon Customer

    An amazon Christmas bargain and as I don’t have either of the books it draws on the material was all-new to me.

    Jon Ronson is my faux-naif investigative English journo of choice. I was particularly impressed that he even sustained the attitude when he name-checks the main UK-based opposition. Louis who?

    If you like extended essays on slightly oddball topics this is just as good as “Them”, and given the range of stories and shorter lengths probably slightly better that “The Men Who Stare at Goats”.

  3. 07

    by Mr Ben Fox

    It’s a fun read when you’ve 30 mins spare and want to wind down with some interesting content. However, the articles are just too short! You get in to them then they abruptly end with one of the author’s mundane comments about how that person/people/organisation applies to or affects his life and family, and no closure to the actual story at hand. Frustrating!

    I’d strongly recommend Louis Theroux’s Weird Weekend book instead. It’s the same concept, and even has one or two character crossovers, but is a lot more in depth and better written – Ronson’s penchant for simple present tense really grates (in my view) and makes it read like the witterings of a madman more often than not.

    Don’t get me wrong, I am enjoying this, just often left feeling cut short at the end of each and every chapter.

  4. 07

    by A. Marczak

    A trip through the work of Jon Ronson is like submerging yourself in some of the weirdest cultures in human existence. Real superheroes, UFO conspiracies (with Robbie Williams of all people), born again Christian hardcore rappers, from Jon Ronson you’d expect nothing less.

    The interesting viewpoint you get from some of these stories is the openness with which Ronson explains how the subject tries to spin his story, sometimes to the detriment of themselves. There are a couple of stories where no one comes out of it well, and you wonder how much his reputation has gone before him, and how much that has coloured the tone of the article.

    Of course, if you are a huge fan of printed (or online) media such as GQ or the Guardian, there’s a very big chance you’ll have read all of these, but if not, you are in for a treat. Ronson approaches the weird and wonderful with all the style of Louis Theroux, but with none of the smarm.

  5. 07

    by Sam Quixote

    In nearly every article of the book, journalist Jon Ronson is able to pick an extraordinary subject to write about in an interesting and engaging way. I loved reading about real life “superhero” Phoenix Jones as he patrols the streets of Chicago, trying to make drunk drivers eat tacos before getting behind the wheel, or discovering that the rap duo Insane Clown Posse have been covert Christians their entire careers, believing they were making converts of their listeners subliminally for 20 years. Other subjects are equally fascinating such as finding out pop star Robbie Williams is a UFO enthusiast and that Stanley Kubrick was a hoarder of everything related to his film career.

    There are some really funny pieces included such as Ronson’s recreation of James Bond’s car journey from Ian Fleming’s “Goldfinger”, eating and drinking everything Bond did on the journey and making himself very sick (Bond, it turns out, was a glutton alcoholic chain smoker who rarely exercised). Ronson also goes on a cruise to meet psychic Sylvia Browne, a woman who goes on TV to tell parents of missing children (often incorrectly) their kids are dead, and finds out, surprise surprise, she’s not just a fake but an unpleasant old bag as well.

    Religion and pseudo-religious beliefs play a big part in the articles where Ronson meets the Jesus Christians, a fringe Christian group with a membership of 24 people worldwide, most of whom have decided that as well as giving away most of their possessions that they will give away a kidney as well! He meets the UK’s biggest atheist-converter Nicky Gumbel, meets TV hypnotist Paul McKenna and his colleague Richard Bandler who admits to being a sociopath and has a sketchy past involving murder but who now makes millions teaching people something called neurolinguistic programming (NLP) which promises to make you a better salesperson.

    The other side of the book take a sobering look at the dark side of humanity. They include a couple of murder/suicide cases, the economic class issues in America, and the sad story of Richard Cullen who committed suicide after becoming hopelessly in debt. Richard Cullen took out numerous credit cards which gave him money with crippling interest rates and was approved for various loans different banks approved, leaving Richard with a six figure debt and no way out. From this one man, Ronson follows the trail back to the banks and exposes the fiasco that was the sub-prime market. This article came out 2 years before the sub-prime crash of 2007.

    My favourite piece in the book, “Santa’s Little Conspirators”, is the story of a group of 13 year old high-school students in the town of North Pole, Alaska, accused of conspiring to commit a Columbine-style massacre at their school (they were stopped before anyone was hurt). North Pole is unique as a town where it is Christmas 365 days of the year and everything in the town is Christmas themed. The would-be killers, like all students in North Pole high school, answered letters from children all over the world addressed to “Santa, North Pole” under elfish pseudonyms. Some of the letters written by small children and given to them to answer are heart breaking like “please make mummy and daddy stop fighting” and “I would like to wear more clothes this year”.

    While parts of “Lost at Sea” have been published in Ronson’s other books – more than half have been printed in “Out of the Ordinary” and all but one have been printed in “What I Do” – and numerous other articles have appeared in GQ magazine and the Guardian newspaper, for those who’ve not read Jon Ronson extensively, this is an excellent collection of his journalism in one handy volume. Like most of Ronson’s journalism, the articles feel too strange to be real, this mixture of strangeness and truth adding to the readability of the articles and lending them an air of surreal-ness. “Lost at Sea” is a fascinating collection of oddball human stories that offers hours of riveting reading pleasure and is a must-read for all readers looking for extraordinary and entertaining non-fiction stories written in an accessible and compelling style.

  6. 07

    by Ella

    My son loved this book! Would buy further titles from the author.

  7. 07

    by Julie Kilburn

    Great book! Covers a variety of interesting essays some funny some sad some thought provoking. My brother in law is not a reader but I know he will enjoy the different quirky stories with Robson’s inimitable take on things. Great selection and I don’t see where others are coming from with their poor reviews. Patchy? What does that even mean?

Main Menu

Lost at Sea: The Jon Ronson Mysteries

£10.40£12.30 (-15%)

Add to Cart