The Best Of The Raconteurs [Folio Society]

by Sheridan Morley (editor)

Other authorsTim Heald (Editor)
Book, 2000

Status

Available

Call number

817

Genres

Collection

Publication

Folio Society (2000), Hardcover, 288 pages

User reviews

LibraryThing member RMMee
Like the other Folio Society anthologies I have read, this is a book that you can dip in and out of quite easily. Whilst there is nothing riveting in its pages, and the occasional dull excerpt, the book is still worth picking up. A light read to pass away a few hours, without demanding your
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undivided attention.
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LibraryThing member heggiep
Light and fluffy. A nice bedside book.
LibraryThing member murderbydeath
I'm calling this finished, even though technically I haven't read it cover to cover. In part because it's really not meant to be read cover to cover, but dipped into now and again more or less randomly and in part because it's making me itch to see it squatting on my Currently Reading list.

The
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Best of the Raconteurs is a rather large collection of anecdotes, bits from speeches and other odds and ends - some seem almost to be snippets of conversation - collected from an incredibly varied cast of wits including Nora Ephron, William Churchill, Oscar Wilde, and David Niven, to touch upon just a very few.

The quality of the entries is all over the place; as some of them aren't more than a paragraph, while others are 2 or 3 pages long, odds were always long that every entry was going to be a winner. Nora Ephron's entry had me laughing out loud, while Ogden Nash's poem charmed me until the very end, where it promptly made my hair stand on end (which is exactly the effect Nash would have wanted). Those that fell flat were the definition of unmemorable.

Generally, a good collection, if you like anecdotes, and very likely to have something for everyone.
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