The Oxford Book of Parodies

The Oxford Book of Parodies

by JohnGross (Editor)

Synopsis

Parodies come in all shapes and sizes. There are broad parodies and subtle parodies, ingenious imitations and knockabout spoofs, scornful lampoons and affectionate pastiches. All these varieties, and many others, are represented in this stunning new anthology, which provides an unparalleled introduction to the parodist's art. The classics of the genre are all here, from Lewis Carroll to Max Beerbohm; but so are scores of lesser known but scarcely less gifted figures, and brilliant contemporaries such as Craig Brown and Wendy Cope. At every stage there are surprises. Chaucer celebrates Miss Joan Hunter Dunn, Proust visits Chelsea, Yeats re-writes 'Old King Cole', Harry Potter encounters Mick Jagger, a modernized Sermon on the Mount rubs shoulders with an obituary of Sherlock Holmes. The collection provides a hilarious running commentary on literary history, but it also looks beyond literature in the narrow sense to take in such things as advertisements, legal rituals, political warfare, and a scientific hoax.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 416
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Published: 13 May 2010

ISBN 10: 019954882X
ISBN 13: 9780199548828

Media Reviews
Endlessly enjoyable * Craig Brown, The Guardian *
Sumptuous collection. * The Oldie *
There are endless amusing trifles. * The Week *
Mr Gross's legendary gifts as an editor and critic are much in evidence. * Eric Ormsby, Wall Street Journal *
Substantial and richly entertaining anthology...Gross provides a brief but admirably informative history of the form. * The Sunday Telegraph *
John Gross is an excellent and unintrusive host...he has produced here a fine, diverting book * Seamus Perry, TLS *
Sparkling new compendium. * DJ Taylor, Financial Times *
His entries have enough comic vigour or elegance to be amusing even when one does not know the author being spoofed, and hilarious when one does. * Kevin Jackson, Sunday Times *
John Gross's new anthology of parodies in English (with a few foreign titbits) has samples both high and low of this diverse genre. * The Economist *
The best pastiches, burlesques and spoofs have a magical wit that transcends mere mimicry, as this wide-ranging anthology shows. * Kevin Jackson, The Sunday Times *
Gross has very sensibly put together an anthology that aims to give pleasure on at least two levels. * Kevin Jackson, The Sunday Times *
It is impossible to read it without smiling, smirking or laughing out loud. * Mark Sanderson, Evening Standard *
Superb anthology of parodies...This is an anthology with something for everyone. * Simon Griffith, Mail on Sunday *
John Gross has compiled a historical anthology that is something to treasure. * John Sutherland, Literary Review *
This collection of parodies does not disappoint...It's a deliciously funny book. * Bevis Hillier, Spectator *
Excellent introduction to this superb smorgasbord of mimicry and literary mutilation. * Jonathan Wright, Catholic Herald *
His new and welcome anthology is well stocked with witty and diverting specimens. * J. M. W. Thompson, Standpoint *
Author Bio
John Gross was editor of the TLS from 1973-80 and a staff writer for the New York Times from 1983-9; he was theatre critic for the Sunday Telegraph from 1989-2005. He is the author of books including The Rise and Fall of the Man of Letters (1969; revised 1991), Shylock: a Legend and its Legacy (1992, winner of the Heinemann Prize of The Royal Society of Literature), and a memoir, A Double Thread (2001). For Oxford he has edited anthologies of Aphorisms, Essays, Comic Verse, English Prose and After Shakespeare. His most recent anthology is The New Oxford Book of Literary Anecdotes (2006, pbk 2008).