Volume 24, Number 17 · October 27, 1977

Smilin' Through

By Nigel Dennis
Essays of E.B. White
by E.B. White

Harper and Row, 277 pp., $12.50

One of the many interesting pieces in Essays of E.B. White is called 'Some Remarks on Humor' and was originally the preface to an anthology of humor assembled by White and his wife and published in 1941. In it, White does his duty to the publishers like a man and talks about the essence of humor—why funny is so funny, what temperature the oven should be, and so on—but his heart is not in this unhappy duty; no man knows better that a dissertation on humor is bound to be worthless as information and painful as reading matter. So, he moves on smartly to the infinitely fascinating question, which nobody has managed to answer, of why Americans believe 'that if a thing is funny it can be presumed to be something less than great, because if it were truly great it would be wholly serious.'



Review, 1826 words

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