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Devil's Dictionary by Bierce, Ambrose
Born in Ohio in 1842 journalist, short-story writer and critic Ambrose Bierce developed
into one of this country's most celebrated and cynical wits - a merciless "American Swift"
whose literary barbs were aimed at folly, self-deulsion, politics, business, religion, literature
and the arts. In this splendid "dictionary" of epigrams, essays, verses and vignettes, you'll
find over 1,000 pointed definitions, e.g. Congratulation ("The civility of envy"), Coward
("One who in a perilous emergency thinks with his legs") and Historian ("A broad-gauge
gossip"). Anyone who likes to laugh will love The Devil's Dictionary. Anyone looking for a
bon mot to enliven their next speech, paper or conversation will have a field day thumbing
through what H.L. Mencken called "some of the most gorgeous witticisms in the English
langauge." Paperback, 139 pages
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