Dave Gorman is a comedian who likes doing things.
He hates to be bored. He is also a comedian who likes a challenge. He has in
the past set out to prove that there are more people in the world named Dave
Gorman than himself. Similarly, he has travelled the world in the search of
“Googlewhacks.” Some of these have formed the basis for his comedy shows, in
the case of former, “Are You Dave Gorman?”, and in the case of the latter, “DaveGorman's Googlewhack Adventure.” In both cases, the comedian has turned the
activities into books as well. Sometimes he combines his activities with a
comedy tour, such as “Sit Down, Pedal, Pedal, Stop and Stand Up,” in which he combined
a comedy tour with a cycle ride from Britain's southernmost point to its
northernmost tip. For his latest book, Dave Gorman has taken an activity and
written about it, but not turned it into a comedy show. In Dave Gorman
vs. The Rest Of The World, Dave Gorman is so bored that he goes out
and plays an awful lot of games – with us.
As a kid, Dave Gorman liked playing games. He liked
going round to friends’ houses to see what they were playing, and then joining
in. His starting point in Dave Gorman vs. The Rest Of The
World is that as adults we do not do that. Playing games is not an
adult pursuit, whereas going out for a pint or to a nightclub is, though of
course, as you, the reader of this blog and I, know that to be anything other
than the case. Plenty of adults do get together every week and play games.
Sometimes more than once. It is just that such activity is not seen as normal
or ordinary when compared to say, watching a football match or going to
nightclub, but I digress... So the author decides to see if he can pop round
the corner to friends’ houses and see what they are playing. Rather than
ringing the one bell of the one house, and when the door was opened, asking, “Would
you like to play a game?”, he asked on Twitter and got an awful lot of
responses.
Born out of a desire to do something between the
time that he arrives in a town and the time when he needs to be on stage to
perform, Gorman finds himself travelling the length and width of the country –
and not the world as the title of the book suggests – at what are essentially
people’s invitations. So the question is, what does he get to play? He starts
off with The Laser Game: Khet in Didcot and Ping Pong in White City. He plays Kubb in Milton Keynes and Kensington – not actually in Kensington,
but near Liverpool Street Station. More interestingly for us he does get
introduced to Settlers of Catan and plays
it not once, but twice. Perhaps the book’s apogee when it comes to this type of
Eurogame is when his holiday collides with that of Tim Harford in the Lake
District. A well-known economist, Harford presents series on Radio 4 entitled
More or Less, which discusses numbers and how they bear on recent news stories.
Bar the likes of Ian Livingstone and Steve Jackson, Tim Harford is perhaps our
best known board game player, having confessed to being a boardgamer in public. He
exposes Gorman to Agricola.
It proves to be all a bit much for our Mr. Gorman. He
does play other Euro Style games, and some are even mentioned in the back cover
blurb, but none of them are mentioned in more than passing. Instead, the author
concentrates on pub and garden games, and there is nothing as such wrong with
that. Except that, if a game is mentioned on the back cover blurb, surely it
deserves more than a mention in the book itself? After all, it might be that the reader wants to
read about what a known comedian like Dave Gorman thinks of such a game. It
might be that the blurb suggests that he tries a whole lot more of the games
that the reader likes if that game is not all that well-known. It is not
entirely fair to criticise the author on the basis of his preferences and
experiences when it comes to playing games. It is clear that he has a
preference for something that he can grasp immediately, usually something with
a physical element, whether that is Darts, a game that he is known to be fond
of, or Smite,
a game that is wholly new to him.
Despite the slight interest that Dave Gorman
vs. The Rest Of The World will have for anyone who enjoys board
games, the book itself is well written, the author’s voice gently carries you
along with an observed humour about the places he visits and the people that he
meets, and he does include the rules for many of the games that he played –
though not Agricola obviously. That would
be bulk up Dave Gorman vs. The Rest Of The World enormously
given density of the
Agricola rulebook's rules. Yet given the array of games that he plays,
the author leaves it up to the reader to go and find out more about them. An
appendix detailing a little more about each game and where the reader might go
to purchase said game would have been more helpful than the rules given for
Texas Hold ‘em Poker given in the one appendix. Why not help the reader find
these games for himelf?
Ultimately, the point behind Dave Gorman vs. The Rest Of The World is that there is no point to it, at least in comparison to other Dave Gorman projects. Can he find enough people named Dave Gorman in “Are You Dave Gorman?”? Will he find enough Googlewhacks in “Dave Gorman's Googlewhack Adventure”? Or rather that there is no drive to it, no sense of urgency. It is as meandering as the author’s journey up and down the country, a lazy if pleasant travelogue of a read that matches the holiday that the author took in getting to play the games described in the book. That is, until the book’s penultimate game, the playing of which takes an unnerving and unsettling swerve… This swerve though, is the book’s counterpoint to its actual point. That playing games as an adult can be as fun as when you were kid, that it is as fun as any other social activity.
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