Linda Smith was the brilliant mainstay of Radio 4’s The News Quiz, Just a Minute, and I’m Sorry I Haven’t A Clue for many years. She was just establishing her career on TV through blistering performances on Have I Got News for You, QI and Room 101, when she died of ovarian cancer in 2006. Linda was one of the few women to conquer the male dominated world of comedy and she had the wit and the charm to win over millions of male and female fans in equal measure. She had an eye for the absurdities of modern life and loved to prick the egos of the pompous and the vain. When she called David Blunkett ‘Satan’s bearded folk singer’, it was a simple statement of fact. No wonder then Linda was voted the ‘wittiest person alive’ by Radio 4 listeners in 2002. This collection of her material, from her early stand-up to her radio days is a must-have for any comedy fan.
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Reviews
'This is a ravishing book and I urge you to read it ... the world is sadder and more tender for Smith's tragic loss, and reading I Think the Nurses are Stealing my Clothes will remind you why.'
'Linda's mix of incredulity and spite, her brilliant manipulation of language and sheer warmth of personality, made her more loved - almost worshipped - than any entertainer in recent years ... A comic who had few equals in radio history, but no betters ...Buy this book: it will make you happy'
'Linda Smith's everyday conversation contained more jokes than most comedy scripts and more social comment than most dramas.'
'A plump anthology of deftly witty material ...It's very sad that the woman who defined the word "palisade" as "what the queen drinks" and who observed of John Prescott "I think language isn't his first language" is no longer with us'
'One of the best-loved and funniest voices on radio.'
'The funniest woman I have ever known.'
'A truly funny woman'
'The many tributes last week describing the late Linda Smith as one of the funniest women in Britain have got it wrong. Linda was simply one of the funniest people in Britain and her gifts were such that most of the time, listening to her thoughtful, provocative, casually brilliant one-liners, you forgot she was a woman. I mean that in the best way, the same way that when you read Margaret Atwood or Zadie Smith, you are not conscious of reading a 'lady novelist'.'
'One of the country's finest stand-ups'
'One of the country's more precious natural resources ...Priceless'
'Full of wonderful material ... So many memories!'
'Linda's joyous humour was infused with a fearless inventiveness ... Irreplaceable'