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Never Let a Fool Kiss You...or a Kiss Fool You: Chiasmus & A World of Quotations That Say What They Mean and Mean What They Say: Chiasmus And a World ... Say what They Mean And Mean what They Say
B**R
Fantastic
He is a Master of the English Language.
S**S
Wittiest book
Super witty , love the book
R**W
Brilliant!
Fun, engaging, and informative.
R**R
A Super Fun Read
Note: I made some Mormon angry because of my negative reviews of books out to prove the Book of Mormon, and that person has been slamming my reviews.Your "helpful" vote is greatly appreciated. ThanksIf you love words and their clever use, you will love this book. Dr. Grothe even has a website for new examples of chiasmus (two or more lines that follow a parallel structure). Here is a fine example of chiasmus.The poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge answered one of his critics with the following chiasmus:"I will concede your general rule that every poet is a fool.But as your book serves to show it, not every fool is a poet."I have to repeat the example of one Amazon reviewer, who quoted this line about the Hemingway centennial:"Only in the case of Hemingway could the century of the writer be more celebrated than the most celebrated writer of this century."An historical note!Mormons have claimed to have found chiastic sentence structures in the Book of Mormon (1830), claiming also that chiasmus was unknown in Joseph Smith's day. The truth is that the chiastic structures found in the Bible were well-known to Bible readers--one book containing examples of parallelisms in "Hebrew poetry" was even advertised on the front page of Joseph Smith's hometown of Palmyra New York (Thomas Hartwell Horne, "An Introduction to the Knowledge and Critical Study of the Holy Scriptures").The other fact is that Joseph Smith probably did not intentionally produce any chiastic sentence structures as he dictated the Book of Mormon to his scribe, who sat behind a curtain unable to see the gold plates.Chiastic structures are found in the introduction to the Book of Mormon (admittedly written by Joseph Smith, and in his other writings). Joseph Smith was so repetitious that these unintentional structures are occasionally found (Mormons also delete elements that don't fit in their search for things that "Joseph Smith could not have known").See my review of "Echoes and Evidences of the Book of Mormon." Echoes and Evidences of the Book of MormonEchoes and Evidences of the Book of Mormon
R**K
dire
What a boring book. You get fed up by the fourth 'witty' phrase as they all follow such a tideous pattern. Now sent for recycling.
L**R
Do we create our experiences or do our experiences create us?
As Dr Grothe explains William Safire introduced the term contrapuntal to describe this reversal of the order of words, using an ABBA form, although there are more elaborate ones. The more common description is chiasmus.For example Kennedy said: Let us never (A)negotiate out of (B)fear, but let us never (B)fear to (A) negotiate. You can probably remember the more famous Kennedy quote.Joseph Kennedy also had a quote: 'When the going gets tough, the tough get going.'The Mark Twain quote: "It's not the size of the dog in the fight, it's ...................From the TaoTe Ching: Wise men don't need to prove their point, Men who need to prove their point aren't wise.If you're like me, you will really enjoy this, and learn how to construct your own memorable little quotations.
D**D
Awesome, fun read. Perfecting for reflecting or while at the gym!
I loved this title and adored the book itself even more! You don’t have to enjoy in order and it’s brilliant no matter where or when you pick it up.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 months ago