Joe Berkowitz
Auteur van Away with Words: An Irreverent Tour Through the World of Pun Competitions
Over de Auteur
Joe Berkowitz is an editor and staff writer at Fast Company, covering entertainment and pop culture. He is the coauthor of You Blew It. He lives in Brooklyn with his wife and an ideal tuxedo cat.
Werken van Joe Berkowitz
Tagged
Algemene kennis
- Geslacht
- male
Leden
Besprekingen
Statistieken
- Werken
- 2
- Leden
- 133
- Populariteit
- #152,660
- Waardering
- 3.2
- Besprekingen
- 11
- ISBNs
- 8
And an interesting book this is: because it is an uncorrected proof, it contains a number of spelling and grammatical errors which I'm sure a wary copyeditor has long since corrected; likewise, I'm confident a judicious fact checker caught the fact that Anthony Weiner, one of our more, uh, colorful politicians here in New York City, was never a United States Senator, but rather a Congressman. Before he disgraced himself, that is.
In any case, as its title suggests, this book reports on the world of pun competition, a lively subculture of whose existence I was entirely ignorant. I take exception to the use of the modifier "irreverent" in the title, as I think Mr. Berkowitz actually approaches this world with the reverence it is due, which is to say some, but maybe not too much. While this is a book, I suspect, written for a younger audience (there is a lot of exposition on the social relationships between the real-life characters, and some of it is a bit too chatty for my tastes), and I am an older person, I still found this book compelling in parts, and sufficiently interesting that I read all but the final twenty pages in one compulsive gulp. Incidentally, if you are young and interested in breaking into the world of comedy writing and performing, this book passively supplies an interesting look into the way that milieu operates
Using the conventions of sportswriting, Mr. Berkowitz manages to make the actual pun competitions he attends, and in which he participates, genuinely exciting. He moves his narrative at a brisk pace, making what would potentially induce torpor into a something that reads like, well, like the best descriptive writing about closely fought sporting events, which I suppose is what the pun competitions are.
I like the idea that books like this still have an audience, and therefore still get published. Despite observing several times that puns are generally regarded as the lowest form of comedy, Mr. Berkowitz shows, and doesn't tell--another of this book's strengths--the high but quirky intelligence engaged in participating in a pun competition. The contestants in this world are clearly both intelligent and interesting people, and they're well worth reading about.… (meer)