It feels like a quaint concept: a writer reading his material to a paying crowd.
Considering you can access most printed material on the net, it's testament to David Sedaris' popularity that the Town Hall Concert Chamber was nearly full on Wednesday night.
Then again, the New York humourist's work is so personal, it's only natural to want to check him out in the flesh.
With no new book to promote, fans of his columns in the New Yorker, or his bestselling books such as Me Talk Pretty Some Day, Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim, When You Are Engulfed in Flames or 2010's Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk, might have wondered what led to an Australasian tour here in the first place.
But there was plenty of new material to keep the crowd enthralled for the 90 minutes he owned the stage. A natural speaker despite his apparent timidity and a tendency to
wear his bathing suit inside out, the first of his two Auckland shows was hysterical.
Even a two-month-old piece from the New Yorker about his use of the Pimsleur language courses reached new levels of hilarity with the addition of the voice of God (the guy who reads the audio).