Amazon.com Review
With a historian's tenacity and the insight of a literary critic, Brian Burrell's zeal for his subject is apparent on every page of
The Words We Live By. He writes about the origins and significance of some of the most famous sayings in English, from the Hippocratic oath to Murphy's Law, from the golden rule (22 versions) to mottoes on buildings and monuments across America. Burrell's zeal was inherited from his father, who collected these mottoes over years of excursions and business trips. By adding intelligent historical commentary, Burrell has succeeded in reviving the essential wisdom that lies dormant in words that are more than just words.
From Library Journal
This book by Burrell (Univ. of Massachusetts, Amherst) is at once a treasury of well-loved quotations, an inquiry into the twisted past of much of Americans' received wisdom, and commentary that ranges from law codes to ethics to architecture. In chapters that treat creeds, oaths, pledges, codes of conduct, advice, mottoes, maxims, slogans, and inscriptions, Burrell serves up a bewitching brew of history, humor, anecdote, and good sense to show that we really don't understand much of what we think we know about the words we live by. The second half of the book is a compendium of texts, some of which are discussed in the narrative. More illustrations would have aided the readers' understanding of the chapter on inscriptions, but that caveat aside, this is an intriguing and entertaining book that should prove popular with a general audience.?David B. Mattern, Univ. of Virginia, Charlottesville
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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