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[2TE]∎ PDF Free Fables in Slang George Ade 9781290802772 Books

Fables in Slang George Ade 9781290802772 Books



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Download PDF Fables in Slang George Ade 9781290802772 Books

Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made available for future generations to enjoy.

Fables in Slang George Ade 9781290802772 Books

Publication date: 1899

... When she couldn't stand up Luella for any more Car Fare she went out looking for Work, and hoping she wouldn't find it. The sagacious Proprietor of a Lunch Room employed her as Cashier. In a little While she learned to count Money, and could hold down the Job.
Marie was a Strong Card. The Male Patrons of the Establishment hovered around the Desk long after paying their Checks. Within a Month the Receipts of the Place had doubled. It was often remarked that Marie was a Pippin. Her Date Book had to be kept on the Double Entry System.

Most of the reviewers have remarked how old-fashioned these little stories are (they first appeared as newspaper columns). I was struck, on the contrary, by their freshness. George Ade's America is very recognizable:

... In Centreville there lived two husky Young Fellows named Bill and Schuyler—commonly abbreviated to Schuy. They did not find any nourishing Excitement in a Grain Elevator, so they Enlisted to Free Cuba. The Government gave each of them a Slouch Hat and a prehistoric Firearm. They tied Red Handkerchiefs around their Necks and started for the Front, each with his Head out of the Car Window. They gave the Sioux Yell to everybody along the Track between Centreville and Tampa.

What is most striking about these stories- besides their complete variety- is their anti-sentimentality. The 'slang' itself rarely veers into uncharted territory. Here is my favorite, from "The Fable of the Brash Drummer, and the Peach Who Learned that There Were Others":

.. On the occasion of his next Visit to the Way Station, he let her wear his Ring, and made a Wish, while she took him riding in the Phaeton. He began to carry her Photograph in his Watch, and show it to the Boys employed at the House. Sometimes he would fold over one of her Letters so they could see how it started out. He said the Old Man had Nothing But, and he proposed to make it a case of Marry. Truly, it seemed that he was the principal Cake in the Pantry, and little did he suspect that he could be Frosted.

Product details

  • Paperback 230 pages
  • Publisher HardPress Publishing (August 1, 2012)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 1290802777

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Fables in Slang George Ade 9781290802772 Books Reviews


The first thing you have to tackle with this book is the title, since these stories are not fables and there is little "slang". Ade was not a fantasist. These are very short, realistic, and sometimes very funny stories. He called them fables because they all have a moral, but the moral is ironic, meant to underline the hypocracy and narrow vision of small town mid-west America in the turn of the Century (19th-20th Century). By slang he meant these are stories in the vernacular, written in a conversational tone. Ade was a Drieser in miniature, and one of our best humorists, and his fans included Edmund Wilson and fellow Hoosier Jean Shephard (another underappreciated humorist, remembered for the film The Christmas Story).
Note I downloaded this free from the Gutenberg Project rather than , so there may be a few differences between this version and the one I have.

This was written in 1899 and the English has not been updated. Once you get used to the style though, the stories become amusing. They seem more like accounts of people learning life's lessons rather than fables. Some are funny, some are sad and a few I didn't get. As I read them, I realize even though much has changed between 1899 and today, people are much the same. Many of us make the same dumb mistakes as our ancestors did trusting those we shouldn't, expecting too much or too little, etc. The illustrations are also cool.
Book is unusual because of Fables. That's what I like about it. Other than that there's nothing extra ordinary about it. But a good read for everyone.
Its dated, but funny with much truth!
The title of the review says it all. It's a fun read in short gulps - very short gulps! A good example of prose written back in a time when prose was very proper and somewhat tedious to read.
Great stuff. originally turned on to George Ade by Jean Shepard (another Hoosier writer with a sharp eye to the humor in life.)
I stumbled across George Ade back in high school thanks to an interesting book by one of my favorite radio storytellers, Jean Shepherd, who wrote a book called "The America of George Ade." Jean was kind of the beat generation Garrison Keillor with his stories of growing up in fictitious Hohman, Indiana, near Lake Michigan (rather than Lake Wobegon), one of which got turned into the popular film "A Christmas Story." If you liked that film, you'll like other Jean Shepherd books, and by extension, the grand-daddy of humorous personal observations, George Ade. This was the most popular of many books he wrote of these short essays.
Publication date 1899

... When she couldn't stand up Luella for any more Car Fare she went out looking for Work, and hoping she wouldn't find it. The sagacious Proprietor of a Lunch Room employed her as Cashier. In a little While she learned to count Money, and could hold down the Job.
Marie was a Strong Card. The Male Patrons of the Establishment hovered around the Desk long after paying their Checks. Within a Month the Receipts of the Place had doubled. It was often remarked that Marie was a Pippin. Her Date Book had to be kept on the Double Entry System.

Most of the reviewers have remarked how old-fashioned these little stories are (they first appeared as newspaper columns). I was struck, on the contrary, by their freshness. George Ade's America is very recognizable

... In Centreville there lived two husky Young Fellows named Bill and Schuyler—commonly abbreviated to Schuy. They did not find any nourishing Excitement in a Grain Elevator, so they Enlisted to Free Cuba. The Government gave each of them a Slouch Hat and a prehistoric Firearm. They tied Red Handkerchiefs around their Necks and started for the Front, each with his Head out of the Car Window. They gave the Sioux Yell to everybody along the Track between Centreville and Tampa.

What is most striking about these stories- besides their complete variety- is their anti-sentimentality. The 'slang' itself rarely veers into uncharted territory. Here is my favorite, from "The Fable of the Brash Drummer, and the Peach Who Learned that There Were Others"

.. On the occasion of his next Visit to the Way Station, he let her wear his Ring, and made a Wish, while she took him riding in the Phaeton. He began to carry her Photograph in his Watch, and show it to the Boys employed at the House. Sometimes he would fold over one of her Letters so they could see how it started out. He said the Old Man had Nothing But, and he proposed to make it a case of Marry. Truly, it seemed that he was the principal Cake in the Pantry, and little did he suspect that he could be Frosted.
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