I Beg To Differ: Politically Incorrect, Proudly Midwestern, Potentially Funny (First Edition, Autographed Copy)

$24.95

FIRST EDITION, AUTOGRAPHED COPY ( 5 COPIES AVAILABLE).

  • 227 pages

  • 6 × 9

  • Hardcover

  • ISBN 1-882203-240

  • Copyright 1998

By Laura Pulfer

Can you make people laugh and make your point at the same time? Laura Pulfer’s fans think so.

The popular newspaper columnist and radio commentator has become well-known for the punches she does not pull. “My job is to get people to think about important political shenanigans and sex scandals of all kinds, not to mention crime, urban blight, the crisis in our public schools and bad movies. But most people are just like me—thinking instead about all the plans elected officials have for our personal money and why food that tastes like kitty litter seems to be the only thing between us and certain death.”

Opinionated and disarmingly honest, she avoids “movies with subtitles, fresh shrimp in peels, aerobics, salad bars and networking. They’re all too much work for what you get out of them.” She claims that during her years as a journalist, “I’ve made friends in high and low places and offended them all at least once. But they forgive me because they know my heart is pure.”

FIRST EDITION, AUTOGRAPHED COPY ( 5 COPIES AVAILABLE).

  • 227 pages

  • 6 × 9

  • Hardcover

  • ISBN 1-882203-240

  • Copyright 1998

By Laura Pulfer

Can you make people laugh and make your point at the same time? Laura Pulfer’s fans think so.

The popular newspaper columnist and radio commentator has become well-known for the punches she does not pull. “My job is to get people to think about important political shenanigans and sex scandals of all kinds, not to mention crime, urban blight, the crisis in our public schools and bad movies. But most people are just like me—thinking instead about all the plans elected officials have for our personal money and why food that tastes like kitty litter seems to be the only thing between us and certain death.”

Opinionated and disarmingly honest, she avoids “movies with subtitles, fresh shrimp in peels, aerobics, salad bars and networking. They’re all too much work for what you get out of them.” She claims that during her years as a journalist, “I’ve made friends in high and low places and offended them all at least once. But they forgive me because they know my heart is pure.”