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O Dammit!: A Lexicon and a Lecture from William Cowper Brann, the Iconoclast
 
 
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O Dammit!: A Lexicon and a Lecture from William Cowper Brann, the Iconoclast [Hardcover]

Jerry Flemmons (Author)

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Book Description

October 15, 1998
Why am I an Iconoclast? . . . Sir, I am a seeker of Truth. . . . [W]hen you get an idea, put it on the anvil and bid the world hit it with the heaviest sledge. The more you hammer Truth the brighter it becomes." When an enraged reader gunned him down in Waco, April Fool's Day 1898, William Cowper Brann had published The Iconoclast, the nation's most controversial magazine, for some forty months. It was the only American journal to claim a quarter-of-a-million monthly circulation, owing largely to Brann's gusto for offering up his "truths." Though his circulation was international, his favorite idols for smashing were those he found at home in Waco, nicknamed "Six-Shooter Depot" and which exemplified, he believed, Texas's reputation for "furnish[ing] forth more hidebound dogmatists, narrow-minded bigots and intolerable fanatics in proportion to population than any other section of these United States!" Though a twelve-volume 1912 edition of The Iconoclast resides here and there in rare book collections, public access to the writings of Texas's perhaps most infamous and entertaining journalist has been surprisingly limited. Jerry Flemmons's lexicon synthesizes the most memorable and current Brannisms into a facilely retrievable format. From America to Texas Politics to the Universe, these selected snippets prove how brightly indeed wisdom, wit, and the well-turned phrase survive pounding of the ages. But perhaps the beacon of O dammit! is the one-man, two-act play that Flemmons presents as a lecture by Brann on the last day of his life. Though it has been performed around Texas for more than a decade, it is a script whose every stage note and direction deserves to be read and whose every line reflects not only Brann's genius but also that of the man who's become the keenest authority thereon.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Ladies and Gentlemen: There are many things which I cordially dislike, but my pet aversion is what is known as a "set" lectureone of those stereotyped affairs ground out with studied inflection and practiced gesture; hence, I shall ask permission to talk to you as informally and as freely as though we were seated in friendly converse around the soda fount of a Kansas City drug store, and I want you to feel free to talk back as though we had gotten into this difficulty by accident instead of design. Read the first page
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Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New Woman, New York, William Brann, Baylor University, San Antonio, Baptist Standard, Kansas City, Dallas News, Houston Post, United States, Almighty God, Holy Ghost, New Jerusalem
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Front Cover | Front Flap | First Pages | Index | Back Flap | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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