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A Local Book for Local People
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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A Local Book For Local People is a 2000 book by the British comedy team behind The League of Gentlemen. It is similar to comedy books by Monty Python and The Goodies in that it is a collection of loose material collected in a scrap book format. The material is connected by Tubbs, who has found the various snippets on the moors.
![]() | It has been suggested that this article be merged into The League of Gentlemen. (Discuss) Proposed since July 2025. |
The Local Book is notable in that the material is much more risqué than the television series.
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Reception
Mark Sanderson of the Evening Standard called the book "handsomely produced".[1] The Courier-Mail reviewer John Cokley found the book to be "rude, lewd, obscene, anti-nature, satirical, hardly funny".[2] David Chapman of Worcestershire, West Midlands, Herefordshire, and Shropshire Counties Publications found the book to have "a peculiar Pandora's box" of various items.[3]
Chris Titley, a writer for the The Press, thought Local Book was "the most imaginative of the TV books" in the vein of the trademark Monty Python humor.[4] Leicester Mercury said of the book, "you'll just laugh. Unstoppably, hysterically."[5] Martin Rowson of The Independent found the work to be "over-produced and over-designed to the point of total unreadability" and recommended against reading it.[6]
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References
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