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{{infoboxinfobox1
|title=Boomsday
|author=Christopher Buckley
|reviewer=Zoe PageMorris
|genre=General Fiction
|summary=Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country. Blogger extraordinaire Cassandra Devine strives to convince her peers in Generation Whatever to take a stand against their Baby Boomer predecessors in this hilarious book about life, love and Washington politics.
|buy=Yes
|borrow=Yes
|paperback=0749080035
|pages=318
|publisher=Allison & Busby
|date=October 2007
|isbn=978-0749080037
|amazonukcover=Buckley_Boomsday|aznuk=<amazonuk>0749080035</amazonuk>|amazonusaznus=<amazonus>0446579815</amazonus>
}}
It's very hard to describe this book without making it sound far-fetched, worrying or silly-verging-on-frankly-ridiculous, as I found out while trying to recommend it whole-heartedly to colleagues and friends this week. How can you explain that a book about "incentivising suicide" and "US political campaigns" is not just "fun" but the most hilarious thing you've read in ages? Those words rarely appear in the same sentence, but this book is unfortunately just that: an ingenious tale of spin doctors and radical cost-cutting suggestions that are beautifully simple while somewhat unappealing to many, namely that when you hit age 75, poof, you politely go off to kill yourself and "do your bit" to help out the country's ailing welfare system.
Huge thanks go to the publishers, Allison and Busby, for sending this in to The Bookbag.
You may know Buckley from his previous work, notably [[''Thank You for Smoking]]''.
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