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2 Reviews
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I have seen the light!,
By Tiffany Redding (Chicago,IL USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Boswell: A Modern Comedy (American Literature (Dalkey Archive)) (Paperback)
When I first began to read Boswell, I can honestly say that I thought it was dull and boring. What's the point of this book? is what I thought to myself. But as I read on, I began to see the light, the light of comedy in literature. Never before had an author used comedy so cleverly and and easily as Stanley Elkin does. His comedy is not only funny, but brilliant. he can take a three word sentence and turn it into a humorous event that has comedy and meaning. Not only was the comedy very good, but the stucture of the book was clever as well. Elkin would use different stratagies to keep the reader interested, such as interrupting the plot of the story with small stories that didn't really have anything to do with the story , but added humor and sometimes moral lessons. If you as well want ot see the light of comedy, I strongly recommend Boswell to you.
2 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Humorous but...,
By "cyn817" (Chicago, IL USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Boswell: A Modern Comedy (American Literature (Dalkey Archive)) (Paperback)
also a little annoying. Elkin's original writing style, as well as the content, is what makes this novel funny, but it is also what makes this book annoying. Reading the book for my AP Composition class and paying attention more to style than actual content, I noticed that Elkin used several different literary techniques (as most writers do), but it's how he used and combined then that sets him apart form other writers. Elkin makes several plays on words and commmon phrases (such as having a character say, "the plot thickens" while working with clay) and at times uses very descriptive imagery, along with various allusions, hyperboles, and metaphors. While this all made the book interesting at the beginning, it gradually also became overwhelming as the book went on, and certain parts seemed unnecessary and dull.
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Boswell: A Modern Comedy (American Literature (Dalkey Archive)) by Stanley Elkin (Paperback - Apr. 1999)
$13.95
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