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Humorist S. (for Sidney) J. (for Joseph) Perelman is in immediate danger of becoming solemnized, a process that begins as a stiffening in the joints where criticism is written, and is likely to end with an untenured English instructor laboring on "Laundry and Dry Cleaning as Objective Correlatives in the Humor of S.J. Perelman." The humorist himself quite possibly anticipated this situation 25 years ago when he titled one of his essays Don't Bring Me Oscars (When It's Shoesies That I Need...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Idiom Savant | 4/7/1975 | See Source »

...Lately Perelman has been fighting back in other ways. Four years ago, scarcely a fortnight after he was declared a national resource in the New York Times Book Review, he declared a pox on New York City's street life and "twice breathed air," and announced that at the age of 69 he was exiling himself to London. Two years later Perelman was back, grumbling about "too much couth" and the lack of seeds in British rye bread...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Idiom Savant | 4/7/1975 | See Source »

...pity that things did not work out hi England. For Perelman is one of the great nibblers of the mother tongue. In his impeccably cut parodies, words like wattles and dottle, boffin and horripilating are used in ways that have caused two generations of grown men with attache cases to break up in solitary laughter on public transport. But in London, Perelman was removed from the effluvia of his native American id iom and the home-grown idiocies that have produced his best work...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Idiom Savant | 4/7/1975 | See Source »

With a few sparkling exceptions, the pieces collected in Vinegar Puss (written mostly during the past five years) show Perelman at his second best. But this is usually the case in humor collections: the author is always made to look as if he is playing Can You Top This? with himself. Pieces that look good in the casual format of a weekly magazine are rudely upstaged by the hand ful that are very good...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Idiom Savant | 4/7/1975 | See Source »

Around the Bend in 80 Days is only good. It is a six-part slight exaggeration about Perelman's 1971 trip along the route taken by Jules Verne's Phileas Fogg. (Fifteen years ago, Perelman wrote the film script for the Mike Todd spectacular.) Perelman's traveling companion was not Passepartout but a 6-ft. 1-in. "toothsome cupcake" named Sally-Lou Claypool. Aboard H.M.S. Choleria, 19th century British sang-froid bunks amiably with the 20th century cynicism of a hornswoggled American tourist...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Idiom Savant | 4/7/1975 | See Source »

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