
The Casual Ward; Academic And Other Oddments
Versandkostenfrei!
Versandfertig in 1-2 Wochen
16,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
PAYBACK Punkte
8 °P sammeln!
A quick-witted dresser of ideas, The Casual Ward unpacks the oddities of intellect and campus life with a light-then fierce-touch. A. D. Godley's essays are a humane, humorous map of english university life that still feels fresh today. This collection blends sharp language, language and style critiques, and warmly observed academic life anecdotes into a cohesive humour anthology. It moves from early Edwardian Briton's routines to timeless observations of scholars and students, offering both general reader entertainment and material of interest to librarians and collectors. The essays read as ...
A quick-witted dresser of ideas, The Casual Ward unpacks the oddities of intellect and campus life with a light-then fierce-touch. A. D. Godley's essays are a humane, humorous map of english university life that still feels fresh today. This collection blends sharp language, language and style critiques, and warmly observed academic life anecdotes into a cohesive humour anthology. It moves from early Edwardian Briton's routines to timeless observations of scholars and students, offering both general reader entertainment and material of interest to librarians and collectors. The essays read as playful conversations with old university wit collections, yet they pulse with contemporary relevance, revealing how academic culture, etiquette, and curiosity shape our daily lives. The book's literary and historical significance lies in its keen, affectionate portrait of a fading world that shaped modern thought and British humour classics. Godley's voice-clever, exacting, inviting-serves as both scholar's ally and droll companion. For the casual reader, it's brisk, amiable reading; for the classic-literature aficionado, it's a curator's whisper of heritage. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions, The Casual Ward has been restored for today's and future generations. More than a reprint, it is a collector's item and a cultural treasure, a vivid portal into edwardian Britain and the English university mind, destined to delight both new readers and long-time admirers.