<p>Bierce was America's first realist writer, but, unlike realism's later practitioners, he knew something about realityâit's really funny.</p>
- P. J. O'Rourke,
<p>This carefully edited manuscript will add immeasurably to Bierce studies.</p>
- Joseph B. McCullough, University of Nevada-Las Vegas
<p>This is a work of genuinely impressive scholarship and will undoubtedly become the authoritative text for Bierceâs <i>Devilâs Dictionary</i>.</p>
- Thomas V. Quirk, University of Missouri-Columbia
<p>Splendidly produced.</p>
- <i>London Times Literary Supplement</i>,
<p>A compilation of all of Bierce's satirical definitions published over a forty-year period, this latest version of the <i>Dictionary</i> ('A malevolent literary device for cramping the growth of a language and making it hard and inelastic') merits a wide readership both within and without the Academy ('A modern school where football is taught').</p>
- <i>American Literary Review</i>,
<p>Most readers and biographers have agreed with Schultz and Joshi that <i>The Devil's Dictionary</i> is 'quintessential Bierce.' For the serious student of Bierce's diabolical lexicon, their beautiful new edition . . . will be a delight.</p>
- <i>Sewanee Review</i>,
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Ambrose Bierce (Author)
AMBROSE BIERCE (1842â1914?) was one of nineteenth-century Americaâs most renowned satirists. The author of short stories, essays, fables, poems, and sketches, he was a popular columnist and wrote for several San Francisco and London newspapers during his forty-year journalism career.
David E. Schultz (Editor)
DAVID E. SCHULTZ is a technical editor. He is coeditor, with S. T. Joshi, of both A Sole Survivor, a collection of Ambrose Bierce's autobiographical writings, and Lord of a Visible World, an autobiography-in-letters of H. P. Lovecraft.
S. T. Joshi (Editor)
S. T. JOSHI is a freelance writer and editor. He is the editor of The Collected Fables of Ambrose Bierce and author of H. P. Lovecraft: A Life.