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Day, Clarence : Life with Father
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26. printing.
Clarence Day wrote humorously about his family and life. The stories of his father Clarence "Clare" Day were first printed in The New Yorker. They portray a rambunctious, overburdened Wall Street broker who demands that everything from his family should be just so. The more he rails against his staff, his cook, his wife, his horse, salesmen, holidays, his children and the inability of the world to live up to his impossible standards, the more comical and lovable he becomes to his own family who love him despite it all. First published in 1936, shortly after his death, Day's book is a picture of New York upper-middle-class family life in the 1890s. The stories are filled with affectionate irony. Day's understated, matter-of-fact style underlines the comedy in everyday situations.
condition: | |
category: | Books > Foreign Language Books > Books in English > Literature in English > |
category: | Books > Humour > |
publisher: | Alfred A Knopf, 1968. New York, |
item number / ISBN: | 0061076 |
binding: | cloth bound (in original dust jacket) |
pages: | VIII, 234 p. |
language: | English |