O, What a Luxury
Verses Lyrical, Vulgar, Pathetic & Profound
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
September 1, 2013
Half the Masters of the House (of light verse) to whom Keillor dedicates this collectionIra Gershwin, Cole Porter, and Roger Millerare great song lyricists, and Ogden Nash wrote, albeit as a sideline, rhymes for Kurt Weill, among others. Keillor has sung plenty of those bards' works on A Prairie Home Companion; his guests on the show, more. Unsurprisingly, then, music permeates his comic verse, contributing the melody the words sometimes lack (Ira or Cole he ain't quite, as he might admit). It's full of out-and-out song parodies, such as Home on the Plains (instead of Range'), Nikolina (same title as, wryer story than the Swedish American vaudeville standard of the same name), Dark (not Blue') Skies, and cleverest, perhaps, Episcopalian, to be sung to Ain't Misbehavin'. Besides tunefulness, formal variety abounds. Keillor writes excellent limericks, most not dirty, and while he wisely never essays Nash's trademark, wildly irregular couplets, he often loosens meter to the point of blowsiness. As in his best-selling fiction, the subject matter is the (very funny) stuff of the lumpen-bourgeois blues.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)
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