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Exaltation of LarksBUY FROM AMAZON.CO.UK
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EDITORIAL REVIEWGaggle of geese. A comedy of errors. A rash of dermatologists?! This classic collection of collective nouns includes more than 1100 equally pithy, and often poetic, terms. PRODUCT DETAILSPublisher: Penguin Books Australia LtdPub. Date: 30th November 1993 Catalog: Book Media: Paperback Number Of Pages: 336 Ean: 9780140170962 Isbn: 0140170960 ABOUT THIS BOOKUSER REVIEWS
This is not an amusing story book, it is a facinating and infromative reference book providing (often) amusing insights into the workings of the mind. For a book comprising little more than a list of collective nouns, James Lipton has done sterling work in keeping the reader entertained. No classic comedy, but an instructive and thought provoking read. I thoroughly recommend it to anyone interested in any aspect of the English language.
James Lipton has proved, with this book, that he is the most inept author alive. His unctuous attempts at humor fail without exception; "Mein Kampf" would get more laughs at the Wailing Wall. This book is a truckling exercise in fawning obsequiousness, which, while being Jimmy Lipton's lifeblood, is nevertheless abhorrent reading.
Why do English speakers say, "A pack of dogs" when refering to a number of dogs together, but always refer to puppies as "a litter of puppies"? Is it the random quirkiness of our spoken language? Would you believe such sayings have a tangible history, and have been planned? This is the topic of James Lipton's sometimes humorous but always classic book, An Exaltation of Larks. If you've ever the privledge of watching the actor's studio, then you know of James Lipton--one of television's finest interviews and hosts. In 1968, he wrote a book about the beauty and flexibility of the English language called an Exaltation of Larks. It is a study of the English-speaking tradition of coupling words to describe a set, where both words indicate the same thing, such as "a rope of pearls" and "a school of fish." For the first part of the book, Mr. Lipton list the more common phrases and the research that has gone into finding out their meaning--where, for instance, "a pride of lions" originated and how long ago it was first used. (The oldest in the English langauge, apparently!) Where the 1968 edition--which has never been out of print--had only had 118 pages and 175 terms, the Ultimate edition has 300 pages and 1,100 terms. This would make a very fine gift for any Anglophile, artist, writer or comic. Witty, warm, and extremely observant, with clever line illustrations; a plus to any friend's library or your own. |

Informative and entertaining
If I Could Give This Book "No Stars," I Would.
A Celebration of English