Reviews
Quotes, quips, euphemisms, rhymes and rhythms, literary references ('Lo-lee-ta') and puns: "The lowest form of wit, it used to be said, but that was before Ann Coulter." Throughout, the usage advice is sage and also fun, since the writer's own wild wit, while bent and Blount, is razor sharp., I love Roy Blount. I think you should, too. He makes you laugh out loud -- a lot (every couple of pages in this book). Human laughter comes in all sizes, colors, flavors and states of emotional dress, from outraged ("The Daily Show") to infantile (Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck) to raunchy and lowdown ("Californication.") Blount elicits the laughs of generosity and enlightenment; it's the spectacle of a fellow citizen maintaining benevolence while still remaining better and more straightforward than the rest us. (How exactly did our three candidates for Twainhood -- Blount, Vonnegut and Keillor -- get to be such decent chaps, given the darkness of their inspiration?), Roy Blount Jr.'s Alphabet Juice --a relatively short encyclopedic compendium of English usage--pretends to be a practical guide a la Strunk and White or Lynne Truss. But it has more in common with Voltaire's Philosophical Dictionary . The author might prefer a comparison to Ambrose Bierce's Devil's Dictionary . Blount shares with Bierce and Twain a gift for misdirection, an inclination to pull off the fanciest of tricks right in front of us, all the while decrying fanciness. Alphabet Juice pegs knowledgeable as "one ugly word." But Blount is one of our most deeply and broadly knowledgeable writers, and his new book is a personal document, a neo-Platonic manifesto exalting the natural music of language ("Doesn't dog sound like what the English expect from a dog?"). Blount's bull's-eye, which he hits unerringly, is the ecstatic center where talking, writing and singing meet. . . . So Blount has figured out a way to have his fancy cake and eat it, too, with a plastic fork like a regular joe. And guess what? He's sharing the cake, and it's the best cake you ever tasted., A knowledgeable handbook that is also chock-full of funny, colorful opinions on marriage, movies, and Monet., "Alphabet Juiceis pure Roy Blount Jr. amusing, bemusing, and smart as hell." -Fortune "Gracefully erudite and joyous." -Katherine A. Powers,TheBostonGlobe "If everybody's first English teacher were Roy Blount Jr., we might still be trillions in debt, but we would be so deeply in love with words and their magic that we'd hardly notice." -The Dallas Morning News "If your eyes have only skimmed over the long subtitle ofAlphabet Juiceand just vaguely registered that the book has something to do with words, please go back and read the entire subtitle again, slowly. This time listen to the syncopation of the clauses, as well as the alliterative music of the p's and t's, then note the juxtaposition of high and low style ('combinations thereof,' 'innards'), the punchy yet unexpected nouns ('gists,' 'pips'), that touch of genteel sexual innuendo ('secret parts'), and the concluding flourish of the gustatory. Like Roy Blount Jr. himself, his new book's subtitle neatly balances real learning with easy-loping charm." -Michael Dirda,The WashingtonPost "Quotes, quips, euphemisms, rhymes and rhythms, literary references ('Lo-lee-ta') and puns: "The lowest form of wit, it used to be said, but that was before Ann Coulter." Throughout, the usage advice is sage and also fun, since the writer's own wild wit, while bent and Blount, is razor sharp." -Publishers Weekly(starred review) "A knowledgeable handbook that is also chock-full of funny, colorful opinions on marriage, movies, and Monet."-Booklist "Roy Blount Jr.'sAlphabet Juice-a relatively short encyclopedic compendium of English usage-pretends to be a practical guide a la Strunk and White or Lynne Truss. But it has more in common with Voltaire'sPhilosophical Dictionary. The author might prefer a comparison to Ambrose Bierce'sDevil's Dictionary. Blount shares with Bierce and Twain a gift for misdirection, an inclination to pull off the fanciest of tricks right in front of us, all the while decrying fanciness.Alphabet Juicepegs knowledgeable as "one ugly word." But Blount is one of our most deeply and broadly knowledgeable writers, and his new book is a personal document, a neo-Platonic manifesto exalting the natural music of language ("Doesn't dog sound like what the English expect from a dog?"). Blount's bull's-eye, which he hits unerringly, is the ecstatic center where talking, writing and singing meet. . . . So Blount has figured out a way to have his fancy cake and eat it, too, with a plastic fork like a regular joe. And guess what? He's sharing the cake, and it's the best cake you ever tasted."-Paste "I love Roy Blount. I think you should, too. He makes you laugh out loud-a lot (every couple of pages in this book). Human laughter comes in all sizes, colors, flavors and states of emotional dress, from outraged ("The Daily Show") to infantile (Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck) to raunchy and lowdown ("Californication.") Blount elicits the laughs of generosity and enlightenment; it's the spectacle of a fellow citizen maintaining benevolence while still remaining better and more straightforward than the rest us. (How exactly did our three candidates for Twainhood-Blount, Vonnegu, "Grand fun." -Jack Shafer,The New York Times Book Review "If your eyes have only skimmed over the long subtitle ofAlphabet Juiceand just vaguely registered that the book has something to do with words, please go back and read the entire subtitle again, slowly. This time listen to the syncopation of the clauses, as well as the alliterative music of the p's and t's, then note the juxtaposition of high and low style ('combinations thereof,' 'innards'), the punchy yet unexpected nouns ('gists,' 'pips'), that touch of genteel sexual innuendo ('secret parts'), and the concluding flourish of the gustatory. Like Roy Blount Jr. himself, his new book's subtitle neatly balances real learning with easy-loping charm." -Michael Dirda,The WashingtonPost "Quotes, quips, euphemisms, rhymes and rhythms, literary references ('Lo-lee-ta') and puns: "The lowest form of wit, it used to be said, but that was before Ann Coulter." Throughout, the usage advice is sage and also fun, since the writer's own wild wit, while bent and Blount, is razor sharp." -Publishers Weekly(starred review) "A knowledgeable handbook that is also chock-full of funny, colorful opinions on marriage, movies, and Monet."-Booklist "Roy Blount Jr.'sAlphabet Juice-a relatively short encyclopedic compendium of English usage-pretends to be a practical guide a la Strunk and White or Lynne Truss. But it has more in common with Voltaire'sPhilosophical Dictionary. The author might prefer a comparison to Ambrose Bierce'sDevil's Dictionary. Blount shares with Bierce and Twain a gift for misdirection, an inclination to pull off the fanciest of tricks right in front of us, all the while decrying fanciness.Alphabet Juicepegs knowledgeable as "one ugly word." But Blount is one of our most deeply and broadly knowledgeable writers, and his new book is a personal document, a neo-Platonic manifesto exalting the natural music of language ("Doesn't dog sound like what the English expect from a dog?"). Blount's bull's-eye, which he hits unerringly, is the ecstatic center where talking, writing and singing meet. . . . So Blount has figured out a way to have his fancy cake and eat it, too, with a plastic fork like a regular joe. And guess what? He's sharing the cake, and it's the best cake you ever tasted."-Paste "I love Roy Blount. I think you should, too. He makes you laugh out loud-a lot (every couple of pages in this book). Human laughter comes in all sizes, colors, flavors and states of emotional dress, from outraged ("The Daily Show") to infantile (Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck) to raunchy and lowdown ("Californication.") Blount elicits the laughs of generosity and enlightenment; it's the spectacle of a fellow citizen maintaining benevolence while still remaining better and more straightforward than the rest us. (How exactly did our three candidates for Twainhood-Blount, Vonnegut and Keillor-get to be such decent chaps, given the darkness of their inspiration?)"-The Buffalo News "Roy Blount Jr. is a famous American humorist. But that clipped description is kind of like saying that Paris is simply an inland French city: The outline is accurate as far as it goes, but it leaves out all of the captivating details. "-The Boston, Alphabet Juice is the book Roy Blount Jr. was born to write, which, considering his prodigious talent, is saying a lot. Did you know that the word laugh is linguistically related to chickens and pie? This is the book that any of us who urgently, passionately love words--love to read them, roll them over the tongue, and learn their life stories--were lucky enough to be born to read., If your eyes have only skimmed over the long subtitle of Alphabet Juice and just vaguely registered that the book has something to do with words, please go back and read the entire subtitle again, slowly. This time listen to the syncopation of the clauses, as well as the alliterative music of the p's and t's, then note the juxtaposition of high and low style ('combinations thereof,' 'innards'), the punchy yet unexpected nouns ('gists,' 'pips'), that touch of genteel sexual innuendo ('secret parts'), and the concluding flourish of the gustatory. Like Roy Blount Jr. himself, his new book's subtitle neatly balances real learning with easy-loping charm., Roy Blount Jr. is one of the most clever [see sly , witty , cunning , nimble ] wordsmiths cavorting in the English language, or what remains of it. Alphabet Juice proves once again that he's incapable of writing a flat or unfunny sentence., Roy Blount Jr. is a famous American humorist. But that clipped description is kind of like saying that Paris is simply an inland French city: The outline is accurate as far as it goes, but it leaves out all of the captivating details., A book that's as much fun to read backward as forward, Alphabet Juice is also a one-of-a-kind work of literature that will help you write better. It's like The Elements of Style , only updated and hilarious.