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Cargando... The Middle-Aged Man on the Flying Trapeze (1935)por James Thurber
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. "There's an Owl in My Room" and "The Departure of Emma Inch" are the highlights of this collection of Thurber pieces. "Emma" is about the loss of a domestic staffer from the Thurber Household, a delightful account of the days when a "Middle-Class" home contained human appliances. Not to be missed by twenty-first people who have not had that experience. I must have read an earlier reprint as the date was in 1965. ( ) "The Middle-Aged Man on the Flying Trapeze" contains a collection of 36 stories and essays, as well as illustrations, created by humorist James Thurber. Many of the tales focus on married life, usually an unhappy marriage, but always told with a slight bit of dark comedy. Like "Mr. Premble Gets Rid of His Wife", in which said Mr. Premble decides to run away with his secretary. She agrees but on the condition that he kill his wife. The problem is that he can't bring himself to do it until his wife walks him through the process, step by step, nagging him the whole time. Or "The Curb in the Sky" which has Charlie Deshler trying to break his wife's habit of finishing every sentence - whether or not she's correct. Other stories provide funny glimpses into life in the 1930s, such as "The Greatest Man in the World" about a man who flies non-stop around the world, though he's definitely not who the government would want to be a hero; or even offer "how to" advice, such as "How To See a Bad Play" which laments the same stale techniques some playwrights use to convey emotion. I found myself smiling more and more with each story. And I think I needed that respite from all the gloom and doom I usually read. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
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