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  <title><![CDATA[The Fun of It: Stories from The Talk of the Town (Modern Library Paperbacks)]]></title>
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    <![CDATA[The Fun of It: Stories from The Talk of the Town]]>
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    <![CDATA[William Shawn once called <em>The Talk of the Town</em> the soul of the magazine. The section began in the first issue, in 1925. But it wasn't until a couple of years later, when E. B. White and James Thurber arrived, that the <em>Talk of the Town </em>story became what it is today: a precise piece of journalism that always gets the story and has a little fun along the way.<br/><br/><strong>The Fun of It</strong> is the first anthology of <em>Talk</em> pieces that spans the magazine's life. Edited by Lillian Ross, the longtime <em>Talk</em> reporter and <em>New Yorker</em> staff writer, the book brings together pieces by the section's most original writers. Only in a collection of <em>Talk</em> stories will you find E. B. White visiting a potter's field; James Thurber following Gertrude Stein at Brentano's; Geoffrey Hellman with Cole Porter at the Waldorf Towers; A. J. Liebling on a book tour with Albert Camus; Maeve Brennan ventriloquizing the long-winded lady; John Updike navigating the passageways of midtown; Calvin Trillin marching on Washington in 1963; Jacqueline Onassis chatting with Cornell Capa; Ian Frazier at the Monster Truck and Mud Bog Fall Nationals; John McPhee in virgin forest; Mark Singer with sixth-graders adopting Hudson River striped bass; Adam Gopnik in Flatbush visiting the ìgrandest theatre devoted exclusively to the movies; Hendrik Hertzberg pinning down a Sulzberger on how the<em> Times</em> got colorized; George Plimpton on the tennis court with Boris Yeltsin; and Lillian Ross reporting good little stories for more than forty-five years. They and dozens of other Talk contributors provide an entertaining tour of the most famous section of the most famous magazine in the world.<br/><br/>]]>
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    <body><![CDATA[Here is the great thing about the New Yorker: its writing style has always been the same and will always be the same - they still spell it &quot;cöoperative&quot;, for gosh sakes. Most of the short essays in here, if not for the topical matter (stars of stage and screen of the 1930s, etc.), could v...<a href="http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/19280241">more...</a>]]></body>
    
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    <![CDATA[The Fun of It: Stories from The Talk of the Town]]>
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    <![CDATA[William Shawn once called <em>The Talk of the Town</em> the soul of the magazine. The section began in the first issue, in 1925. But it wasn't until a couple of years later, when E. B. White and James Thurber arrived, that the <em>Talk of the Town </em>story became what it is today: a precise piece of journalism that always gets the story and has a little fun along the way.<br/><br/><strong>The Fun of It</strong> is the first anthology of <em>Talk</em> pieces that spans the magazine's life. Edited by Lillian Ross, the longtime <em>Talk</em> reporter and <em>New Yorker</em> staff writer, the book brings together pieces by the section's most original writers. Only in a collection of <em>Talk</em> stories will you find E. B. White visiting a potter's field; James Thurber following Gertrude Stein at Brentano's; Geoffrey Hellman with Cole Porter at the Waldorf Towers; A. J. Liebling on a book tour with Albert Camus; Maeve Brennan ventriloquizing the long-winded lady; John Updike navigating the passageways of midtown; Calvin Trillin marching on Washington in 1963; Jacqueline Onassis chatting with Cornell Capa; Ian Frazier at the Monster Truck and Mud Bog Fall Nationals; John McPhee in virgin forest; Mark Singer with sixth-graders adopting Hudson River striped bass; Adam Gopnik in Flatbush visiting the ìgrandest theatre devoted exclusively to the movies; Hendrik Hertzberg pinning down a Sulzberger on how the<em> Times</em> got colorized; George Plimpton on the tennis court with Boris Yeltsin; and Lillian Ross reporting good little stories for more than forty-five years. They and dozens of other Talk contributors provide an entertaining tour of the most famous section of the most famous magazine in the world.<br/><br/>]]>
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    <body><![CDATA[As if I didn't love the New Yorker enough, I now even love the Talk of the Town column, which I used to skip over. I don't know why. I guess becase they're so short. But these columns illustrate how much you can do with 1,000 words or less...]]></body>
    
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    <![CDATA[The Fun of It: Stories from The Talk of the Town]]>
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    <![CDATA[William Shawn once called <em>The Talk of the Town</em> the soul of the magazine. The section began in the first issue, in 1925. But it wasn't until a couple of years later, when E. B. White and James Thurber arrived, that the <em>Talk of the Town </em>story became what it is today: a precise piece of journalism that always gets the story and has a little fun along the way.<br/><br/><strong>The Fun of It</strong> is the first anthology of <em>Talk</em> pieces that spans the magazine's life. Edited by Lillian Ross, the longtime <em>Talk</em> reporter and <em>New Yorker</em> staff writer, the book brings together pieces by the section's most original writers. Only in a collection of <em>Talk</em> stories will you find E. B. White visiting a potter's field; James Thurber following Gertrude Stein at Brentano's; Geoffrey Hellman with Cole Porter at the Waldorf Towers; A. J. Liebling on a book tour with Albert Camus; Maeve Brennan ventriloquizing the long-winded lady; John Updike navigating the passageways of midtown; Calvin Trillin marching on Washington in 1963; Jacqueline Onassis chatting with Cornell Capa; Ian Frazier at the Monster Truck and Mud Bog Fall Nationals; John McPhee in virgin forest; Mark Singer with sixth-graders adopting Hudson River striped bass; Adam Gopnik in Flatbush visiting the ìgrandest theatre devoted exclusively to the movies; Hendrik Hertzberg pinning down a Sulzberger on how the<em> Times</em> got colorized; George Plimpton on the tennis court with Boris Yeltsin; and Lillian Ross reporting good little stories for more than forty-five years. They and dozens of other Talk contributors provide an entertaining tour of the most famous section of the most famous magazine in the world.<br/><br/>]]>
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  <read_at>Wed Nov 25 00:00:00 -0800 2009</read_at>
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    <body><![CDATA[A fun and funny collection of short non-fiction articles from the New Yoker. It's interesting to chart techniques of humour and article writing through the decades, as TFoI chronicles the entire 20th century run of the New Yorker.]]></body>
    
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    <![CDATA[William Shawn once called <em>The Talk of the Town</em> the soul of the magazine. The section began in the first issue, in 1925. But it wasn't until a couple of years later, when E. B. White and James Thurber arrived, that the <em>Talk of the Town </em>story became what it is today: a precise piece of journalism that always gets the story and has a little fun along the way.<br/><br/><strong>The Fun of It</strong> is the first anthology of <em>Talk</em> pieces that spans the magazine's life. Edited by Lillian Ross, the longtime <em>Talk</em> reporter and <em>New Yorker</em> staff writer, the book brings together pieces by the section's most original writers. Only in a collection of <em>Talk</em> stories will you find E. B. White visiting a potter's field; James Thurber following Gertrude Stein at Brentano's; Geoffrey Hellman with Cole Porter at the Waldorf Towers; A. J. Liebling on a book tour with Albert Camus; Maeve Brennan ventriloquizing the long-winded lady; John Updike navigating the passageways of midtown; Calvin Trillin marching on Washington in 1963; Jacqueline Onassis chatting with Cornell Capa; Ian Frazier at the Monster Truck and Mud Bog Fall Nationals; John McPhee in virgin forest; Mark Singer with sixth-graders adopting Hudson River striped bass; Adam Gopnik in Flatbush visiting the ìgrandest theatre devoted exclusively to the movies; Hendrik Hertzberg pinning down a Sulzberger on how the<em> Times</em> got colorized; George Plimpton on the tennis court with Boris Yeltsin; and Lillian Ross reporting good little stories for more than forty-five years. They and dozens of other Talk contributors provide an entertaining tour of the most famous section of the most famous magazine in the world.<br/><br/>]]>
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  <read_at>Sat Oct 18 10:05:43 -0700 2008</read_at>
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    <body><![CDATA[This books is the tits.  Check it out and be glad you did. But please wait until my friend Kay finishes reading it.  She has it checked out from the library.<br/><br/>]]></body>
    
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    <![CDATA[William Shawn once called <em>The Talk of the Town</em> the soul of the magazine. The section began in the first issue, in 1925. But it wasn't until a couple of years later, when E. B. White and James Thurber arrived, that the <em>Talk of the Town </em>story became what it is today: a precise piece of journalism that always gets the story and has a little fun along the way.<br/><br/><strong>The Fun of It</strong> is the first anthology of <em>Talk</em> pieces that spans the magazine's life. Edited by Lillian Ross, the longtime <em>Talk</em> reporter and <em>New Yorker</em> staff writer, the book brings together pieces by the section's most original writers. Only in a collection of <em>Talk</em> stories will you find E. B. White visiting a potter's field; James Thurber following Gertrude Stein at Brentano's; Geoffrey Hellman with Cole Porter at the Waldorf Towers; A. J. Liebling on a book tour with Albert Camus; Maeve Brennan ventriloquizing the long-winded lady; John Updike navigating the passageways of midtown; Calvin Trillin marching on Washington in 1963; Jacqueline Onassis chatting with Cornell Capa; Ian Frazier at the Monster Truck and Mud Bog Fall Nationals; John McPhee in virgin forest; Mark Singer with sixth-graders adopting Hudson River striped bass; Adam Gopnik in Flatbush visiting the ìgrandest theatre devoted exclusively to the movies; Hendrik Hertzberg pinning down a Sulzberger on how the<em> Times</em> got colorized; George Plimpton on the tennis court with Boris Yeltsin; and Lillian Ross reporting good little stories for more than forty-five years. They and dozens of other Talk contributors provide an entertaining tour of the most famous section of the most famous magazine in the world.<br/><br/>]]>
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    <![CDATA[The Fun of It: Stories from The Talk of the Town]]>
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    <![CDATA[William Shawn once called <em>The Talk of the Town</em> the soul of the magazine. The section began in the first issue, in 1925. But it wasn't until a couple of years later, when E. B. White and James Thurber arrived, that the <em>Talk of the Town </em>story became what it is today: a precise piece of journalism that always gets the story and has a little fun along the way.<br/><br/><strong>The Fun of It</strong> is the first anthology of <em>Talk</em> pieces that spans the magazine's life. Edited by Lillian Ross, the longtime <em>Talk</em> reporter and <em>New Yorker</em> staff writer, the book brings together pieces by the section's most original writers. Only in a collection of <em>Talk</em> stories will you find E. B. White visiting a potter's field; James Thurber following Gertrude Stein at Brentano's; Geoffrey Hellman with Cole Porter at the Waldorf Towers; A. J. Liebling on a book tour with Albert Camus; Maeve Brennan ventriloquizing the long-winded lady; John Updike navigating the passageways of midtown; Calvin Trillin marching on Washington in 1963; Jacqueline Onassis chatting with Cornell Capa; Ian Frazier at the Monster Truck and Mud Bog Fall Nationals; John McPhee in virgin forest; Mark Singer with sixth-graders adopting Hudson River striped bass; Adam Gopnik in Flatbush visiting the ìgrandest theatre devoted exclusively to the movies; Hendrik Hertzberg pinning down a Sulzberger on how the<em> Times</em> got colorized; George Plimpton on the tennis court with Boris Yeltsin; and Lillian Ross reporting good little stories for more than forty-five years. They and dozens of other Talk contributors provide an entertaining tour of the most famous section of the most famous magazine in the world.<br/><br/>]]>
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