

He came of age during what he calls “The Stand-Up Boom” in which opportunities abounded but were also constrained. Greatly inspired by those supremely silly Brits of “Monty Python’s Flying Circus,” he left college early to rattle around Chicago working odd jobs, continuously writing sketch and stand-up ideas, attending improv theater groups, and earning a few bucks at dive-bars telling jokes. Growing up in middling Naperville, Illinois, Odenkirk was the jokester in a large family dominated, then deserted, much to his relief, by his father. Along the way, he surveys America’s comedy landscape over the last five decades from the outside in. Odenkirk’s journey to semi-stardom seemed to follow the arc of a sketch: Small-town guy in the big city pinballs between minor successes and disappointments, hits high notes with hijinks, then delivers the twist of becoming a serious actor. While that may not seem a long trip, his mainstream pit stops as a writer for “Saturday Night Live” and as an actor in movies like “Little Women” and “The Post” provide sufficiently familiar mileposts for everyone to enjoy his amusing showbiz memoir. Show”) to fringe leading man (AMC’s “Better Call Saul”). Perseverance with a heavy dose of luck has propelled Bob Odenkirk’s ascent from fringe sketch comic (HBO’s “Mr. “Comedy Comedy Comedy Drama: A Memoir” by Bob Odenkirk (Random House): This cover image released by Random House shows "Comedy Comedy Comedy Drama" by Bob Odenkirk.
