Brain Droppings

Last updated
Brain Droppings
Brain Droppings.jpg
Author George Carlin
LanguageEnglish
GenreHumor
Publisher Hyperion
Publication date
May 1, 1998
September 1, 2006 (Reprint)
Media type Hardcover
Paperback
Audiobook
Pages272
ISBN 978-0-7868-9112-2
OCLC 150351163
Preceded by Sometimes a Little Brain Damage Can Help  
Followed by Napalm and Silly Putty  

Brain Droppings is the second book written by comedian George Carlin. [1] It was published in 1998.

This was Carlin's "first real book" and contains much of Carlin's stand-up comedy material. According to the cover, the book contains "jokes, notions, doubts, opinions, questions, thoughts, beliefs, assertions, assumptions, and disturbing references" and "comedy, nonsense, satire, mockery, merriment, sarcasm, ridicule, silliness, bluster, and toxic alienation". For longtime Carlin fans, the book also contains complete versions of two of his most famous monologues, "A Place for My Stuff" and "Baseball and Football".

The hardcover edition was on the New York Times Best Seller List for 18 weeks straight. The following year, the paperback edition was published. It stayed on the New York Times Best Seller List for 20 weeks. Both editions were published by Hyperion.

As of 2008, the book had sold nearly 900,000 total copies. [2]

Writer and television commentator Mike Barnicle supposedly lifted material from the book, without accreditation, and presented it as his own. [3] Barnicle denied having read the book, but footage of him Barnicle praising Brain Droppings saying "There's a yuk on every page," turned up. Barnicle was suspended for the action. [3]

In August 1998, Hyperion published a 1999 calendar containing quips and quotes from the book.

In May 2000, the book was published as an audiobook by HighBridge, [4] in both CD and cassette tape formats. The audiobook received a Grammy Award, Carlin's third, in February 2001.

Differences in audiobook

Since there was a 3-year gap between the printed book and the audiobook, a few things were changed due to changes in both Carlin's personal life and in the world in general.

References

  1. Carlin, George (1997). "Brain Droppings". The New York Times .
  2. "2008 Winner: The Mark Twain Prize for American Humor". kennedy-center.org. Retrieved 1 March 2025.
  3. 1 2 Raines, Howell (August 13, 1998). "Editorial Observer; The High Price of Reprieving Mike Barnicle". The New York Times.
  4. "Brain Droppings." Publishers Weekly 247.23 (2000): 62. General OneFile (accessed 27 December 2009).