Biography for beginners : being a collection of miscellaneous examples for the use of upper forms

by E. C. Bentley

Other authorsG. K. Chesterton (Illustrator)
2014

Publication

Gutenberg, 2014. Original, London : T.W. Laurie, [1905?]

Library's rating

Status

Available

Description

The Art of Biography Is different from Geography. Geography is about Maps, But Biography is about Chaps. With these rhyming lines, English novelist and humorist Edmund Clerihew Bentley introduces this book and an unusual form of verse of his own invention. Bentley's four-line poems, known as "clerihews," offer satirical views of historical figures, from Edward the Confessor and Odo of Bayeux to Sir Walter Raleigh, Jane Austen, Karl Marx, Theodore Roosevelt, and many others. The witty verses are accompanied by the book's outstanding feature: whimsical full-page illustrations by G. K. Chesterton.

User reviews

LibraryThing member DavidWineberg
Possibly the easiest book to read, Biography for Beginners consists of a four line ditty describing the identifying bent of some famous man, plus a caricature by GK Chesterton, illustrating that trait. It is whimsical but accurate, in the nature of better political cartoons. The subjects tend to be
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names from pop culture and British history, so many will not be recognized, particularly by Americans. But the British are just as dismissive of what preceded their own self importance, and will puzzle over many. Nonetheless, the book gets republished again and again, and we are rapidly approaching its hundredth anniversary.

At the back, the author divides the biographies by adjective, listing the men by the words that describe them. Of note is Christopher Wren, the architect of St. Paul’s, who appears 24 times. Not bad for a four line description. Apparently Mr. Bentley had an issue with Wren. Or Wren was an outsized brigand – I mean character. Or both.

The whole exercise reminds me of Félix Fénéon, a newspaper editor who wrote entire stories in three lines, about two decades before Bentley’s book. The English translation/collection is called Novels in Three Lines. His stories are so elegant, I am delighted Bentley followed up in English.

David Wineberg
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LibraryThing member thornton37814
Although this short book has been around for a long time, it is now being republished by Dover Publications. It consists of "biographies" of persons written in four lines of rhyming verse. The biographies generally focus on only one thing about each person. The illustrations are drawings done by G.
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K. Chesterton. Some of the rhymes are better than others. Some of the persons included are not likely to be recognized by a 21st century audience. The premise of the book is entertaining, and I'm certain that the audience at the time it was written laughed out loud at many of the rhymes. This review is based on an advance review copy provided by the publisher through NetGalley with the expectation that a review be written.
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LibraryThing member MarthaJeanne
If you want to read this, it is available from Gutenberg, so don't waste money on it. A few of the rhymes are good, and as for the others, at least the book is short.
LibraryThing member datrappert
This is a short, somewhat clever but mostly peculiar collection of poems by E.C. Bentley with nice illustrations by his friend G.K. Chesterton. Unfortunately, after so many years, many of the personages so honored have passed from the collective memory!

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1905
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