About This Book
A satirical portrait of a provincial haberdasher and his flashy New Waterloo establishment uses witty observation to lampoon the nineteenth-century culture of puffery. The narrator catalogs extravagant shopfronts, grandiose names, and theatrical advertising to show how display and promotional artifice overshadow substance in local commerce. Special attention is paid to the marketing of fashionable female goods and the social appetite for novelty, with humorous examples that expose the mechanics and absurdities of commercial hype in a small town.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
6 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
"... Mutta -- naivat tummaverisiä"
by Anita Loos
"And That's How It Was, Officer"
by Ralph Sholto
"Ask Mamma"; or, The Richest Commoner In England
by Robert Smith Surtees
"Bones": Being Further Adventures in Mr. Commissioner Sanders' Country
by Edgar Wallace
"Excelsior"
by Bret Harte
"Gentlemen prefer blondes"
by Anita Loos





