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Literary Lapses

Chapter 59: Acknowledgments
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About This Book

A varied assortment of short comic sketches and essays that satirize social pretensions, bureaucratic absurdities, literary affectations, and everyday embarrassments. Contributions alternate between brief vignettes, extended lampoons, mock-instructional pieces, and parodies, each built around a single humorous premise. Recurring targets include class snobbery, travel annoyances, self-importance, and professional incompetence, all rendered through wry understatement, ironic observation, and exaggerated situations. The collection’s shifting forms and tones create a rapid succession of comic scenes that expose human foibles with lightness and a steady eye for the ridiculous.



Acknowledgments


Many of the sketches which form the present volume have already appeared in print. Others of them are new. Of the re-printed pieces, "Melpomenus Jones," "Policeman Hogan," "A Lesson in Fiction," and many others were contributions by the author to the New York Truth. The "Boarding-House Geometry" first appeared in Truth, and was subsequently republished in the London Punch, and in a great many other journals. The sketches called the "Life of John Smith," "Society Chit-Chat," and "Aristocratic Education" appeared in Puck. "The New Pathology" was first printed in the Toronto Saturday Night, and was subsequently republished by the London Lancet, and by various German periodicals in the form of a translation. The story called "Number Fifty-Six" is taken from the Detroit Free Press. "My Financial Career" was originally contributed to the New York Life, and has been frequently reprinted. The Articles "How to Make a Million Dollars" and "How to Avoid Getting Married," etc. are reproduced by permission of the Publishers' Press Syndicate. The wide circulation which some of the above sketches have enjoyed has encouraged the author to prepare the present collection.

The author desires to express his sense of obligation to the proprietors of the above journals who have kindly permitted him to republish the contributions which appeared in their columns.