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Rafi Kohan has done more than produce a funny, insightful, and beautifully written primer on American culture masquerading as a book about sports. He makes you want to hear the games we love rather than merely watch them.
— Seth Wickersham, New York Times-bestselling author and senior writer, ESPN
The metaphor ‘trash,’ inherent to the phrase ‘trash talk,’ can be misleading. ‘Trash’ implies something disposable; easily discarded; in a word, garbage. Yet there is nothing disposable about Kohan’s new book. Quite the opposite. Trash Talk recognizes the verbal art form of psychological warfare that this misunderstood practice has always represented.
— Todd Boyd, chair for the Study of Race and Popular Culture, USC
There are two kinds of trash talkers: overcompensating fools and tactical geniuses. Kohan’s Trash Talk will teach you the difference between the two. It’s like a CPR course for saving face. This book is informative and very, very funny.
— Anthony Jeselnik
Well, finally, a book that actually probes the single most important part of all sports: the God-given right to talk crazy shit to anyone you or your chosen proxies defeat. You suck if you don’t buy this book.
— Wright Thompson, New York Times-bestselling author of Pappyland
Your mama not only wears combat boots, but she says Trash Talk is the best book on the planet. Which it may well be. A joyful, adventurous read that’ll leave you screaming, ‘Bro, you can’t guard me!’ Bravo.
— Jeff Pearlman, New York Times–bestselling author
An entertaining study of the taunts and insults that pervade sports and the larger culture... A treat for students of language, as well as would-be Don Rickles heirs looking to hone their craft.
— Kirkus Reviews
Kohan’s nuanced inquiry highlights trash talk’s surprisingly diverse applications, and he’s never less than entertaining (“To call it dark humor would be a disservice to Pantone charts everywhere,” Kohan writes of the withering insults at a comedy roast). This is a blast.
— Publishers Weekly
In this thoroughly reported, example-laden look at ‘trash talk,’ Kohan makes a compelling case for the power of words.
— Booklist
Comprehensive…The book is informed by a great wealth of interviews, not only with athletes past and present, but also with match officials, coaches and sports psychologists… Kohan offers plenty of insights into the psychology of giving and receiving insults.
— Wall Street Journal
Kohan explores how talking smack can help or hinder a person in any situation—from the sports field to the workplace.
— Fast Company