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Constant Reader: The New Yorker Columns 1927-28
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Constant Reader: The New Yorker Columns 1927-28
Current price: $18.00
Barnes and Noble
Constant Reader: The New Yorker Columns 1927-28
Current price: $18.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: Paperback
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Dorothy Parker’s complete weekly
New Yorker
column about books and people and the rigors of reviewing.
When, in 1927, Dorothy Parker became a book critic for the
, she was already a legendary wit, a much-quoted member of the Algonquin Round Table, and an arbiter of literary taste. In the year that she spent as a weekly reviewer, under the rubric “Constant Reader,” she created what is still the most entertaining book column ever written. Parker’s hot takes have lost none of their heat, whether she’s taking aim at the evangelist Aimee Semple MacPherson (“She can go on like that for hours. Can, hell—does”), praising Hemingway’s latest collection (“He discards detail with magnificent lavishness”), or dissenting from the Tao of Pooh (“And it is that word ‘hummy,’ my darlings, that marks the first place in
The House at Pooh Corner
at which Tonstant Weader Fwowed up”).
Introduced with characteristic wit and sympathy by Sloane Crosley,
Constant Reader
gathers the complete weekly
reviews that Parker published from October 1927 through November 1928, with gimlet-eyed appreciations of the high and low, from Isadora Duncan to Al Smith, Charles Lindbergh to Little Orphan Annie, Mussolini to Emily Post
New Yorker
column about books and people and the rigors of reviewing.
When, in 1927, Dorothy Parker became a book critic for the
, she was already a legendary wit, a much-quoted member of the Algonquin Round Table, and an arbiter of literary taste. In the year that she spent as a weekly reviewer, under the rubric “Constant Reader,” she created what is still the most entertaining book column ever written. Parker’s hot takes have lost none of their heat, whether she’s taking aim at the evangelist Aimee Semple MacPherson (“She can go on like that for hours. Can, hell—does”), praising Hemingway’s latest collection (“He discards detail with magnificent lavishness”), or dissenting from the Tao of Pooh (“And it is that word ‘hummy,’ my darlings, that marks the first place in
The House at Pooh Corner
at which Tonstant Weader Fwowed up”).
Introduced with characteristic wit and sympathy by Sloane Crosley,
Constant Reader
gathers the complete weekly
reviews that Parker published from October 1927 through November 1928, with gimlet-eyed appreciations of the high and low, from Isadora Duncan to Al Smith, Charles Lindbergh to Little Orphan Annie, Mussolini to Emily Post