Book of pslams 97 divine diatribes on humanity's total failure

David Javerbaum

Book - 2021

"3,000 years ago, King David wrote The Book of Psalms-150 hymns in praise of God that became famous the world over. Now, with humanity on the verge of a self-generated catastrophe, God (with the help of another David) has decided to return, and reverse, the favor. He has written a cornucopia of insults of the human race in the form of prose, poetry, and parody. Their topics are as diverse as COVID, Trump, racism, abortion, meth, math, and, on a lighter note, the platypus. And he's not alone: his son Jesus Christ has contributed thirty sermons of his own, updates of some of his Biblical teachings for the modern, dumbed-down audience. Even Joan of Arc stops by to conduct a ten-part interview with God and get to the bottom of why she... was burned at the stake. Anybody who's a fan of @TheTweetOfGod and/or NOT a fan of the human race is sure to love The Book of Pslams"--

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Subjects
Genres
Humor
Published
New York : Simon & Schuster 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
David Javerbaum (author)
Edition
First Simon & Schuster hardcover edition
Item Description
On the title page and cover the word "Psalms" is crossed out replaced with "Pslams"
Includes index.
Physical Description
xiii, 224 pages : illustrations (black and white) ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781982176020
9781982176037
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

God is back. Sure, his perennial bestseller is the Bible, but his most recent offering was The Last Testament: A Memoir by God (2011), written with the help of David Javerbaum. Here, God (and Javerbaum) have cowriters: Jesus and the Holy Ghost. God handles new versions of the psalms (called "Pslams"); Jesus provides commentary on sermons, and the Holy Ghost delivers rather limp poetry. Those familiar with God's Twitter, @TheTweet of God, know to expect the sacred but mostly the profane. Nothing is off the table as the Trinity takes on everything from climate change and the #MeToo movement to homophobia and even masturbation. (God, being everywhere, is not happy he has to watch.) This Trinity swings at a lot, and, inevitably, there are plenty of misses. Obviously (understatement alert), this isn't for everyone. But for those who find truths twisted by sacrilege their cup of wine, well, bless you.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this wickedly funny riff on King David's Book of Psalms, Emmy-winning comedy writer Javerbaum (The Last Testament)--also known as God (@TheTweetOfGod) on Twitter--channels the Trinity to spread the Lord shepherd's good word to humanity to "go flock yourselves." God doesn't answer prayers because, as he bemoans, the vast majority of the people offering them don't know what the hell they're doing. With the human race fast approaching extinction, Jesus advises with the desperation of a car salesman, "Don't delay, heathens: Cash in on this amazing opportunity to ensure yourself eternal life by believing in me today. Act now!" Elsewhere, God offers a rapid-fire debunking of conspiracy theories--"Oswald acted alone; the moon landing was real; Kurt Cobain killed himself; vaccinations don't cause autism"--conceding that "for a true conspiracy theorist even a disavowal from God Himself is insufficient." Readers who haven't injured themselves laughing will be relieved to hear that doggie heaven is real, though it "doubles as mailman hell." In his final "pslam," God reiterates to his followers why he's so angry: "You're hurting one another; you're choosing terrible people to lead you; you're destroying the planet... you're just a bunch of assholes." No sacred cow goes untipped in this sidesplitting work. (Dec.)

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