![]() A conjuror at this literary con game, many of his best are concealed, challenging the reader to find them all. He provides examples of the penchant by embedding puns throughout his short text. ![]() There have always been more groans than giggles from pungent critics like Sam Johnson and Oliver Wendell Holmes, but Pollack counter punches in his defense of punning, holding it to be no real mistreatment of one’s mother tongue but simply an arty vice. Pollack finds puns in ancient cuneiform tablets, today’s newspaper headlines, knock-knock jokes, TV comedy and movies-and, of course, in Master Shakespeare’s copious riffs. After a generous definition, the author examines the etymology, neurology, anthropology and sociology of primeval gags, antique jokes and hoary wordplay. His thesis is that puns, commonly reviled, have serious implications. ![]() ![]() ![]() The moderately puerile samples from that war of words, found in the introduction, should be overlooked in favor of the more sophisticated content that follows. Pollack ( Cork Boat: A True Story of the Unlikeliest Boat Ever Built, 2005, etc.), a former presidential speechwriter, was the 1995 winner of the O. A champion punster finds hidden and significant meaning in cunning wordplay. ![]()
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