Hello poetry lovers. Today’s poem is a pun of stunning disregard for human frailties. It is titled, Names of Hair Salons:
Bangs For The Memories,
Shear Hostility,
The Best Little Hair House,
Come Hair; Hairway To Heaven
Babalouise, Bang, Headonizm,
Hair Today, Curl Up and Dye,
The Bobshed
But I jest.
It’s been called the lowest form of humor, which is a compliment in this case. Puns are illegal in 37 states (I made that up, but it’s an idea whose time has come), they are frequently annoying, and the people who regale others with punnage seldom bathe (also made up) [it’s TRUE!]. Yet puns are standard fare in the names of both hair salons and cozy mysteries. Why? Is it sadism run amok?
We may never know.
Perhaps you’d like to start your voyage with a thorough understanding of just what a pun is all about. Wellsir, I would recommend The Pun Also Rises: How the Humble Pun Revolutionized Language, Changed History, and Made Wordplay More than Some Antics by John Pollack. Penned by a former Clinton speech writer, the author not only explores the definitions and history of puns, but makes a case that they are significant to the rise of modern culture.
Next we’ll stroll over to the cozy mystery section and discover that puns in titles are completely out of control. There are puns on classic book titles (The Cakes of Wrath; Grapes of Death; Grape Expectations; Grey Expectations), movies (Nightshade on Elm Street; Bell, Book, and Scandal; Arsenic and Old Puzzles; The Silence of the Llamas), Plays (End me a Tenor), Poems (Murder had a Little Lamb), songs (Bewitched, Bothered, and Biscotti), television (Ghouls Gone Wild), magazines (Deader Homes and Gardens) and musicals (A Little Night Murder).
Had enough? Too bad. The most egregious offenders are puns based on common phrases. Choose your favorite from the following (the last one being my fave):
Three’s a Shroud Thread on Arrival If Books Could Kill Meet your Baker Kill ‘em with Cayenne Book, Line and Sinker Hiss and Hers Going, Going, Ganache Animal, Vegetable, Murder
Read and Buried Wined and Died To Brie or Not to Brie
Skein of the Crime Mallets Aforethought Assaulted Pretzel
Cozy mysteries often have a hobby or interest associated with them, like archery or fan dancing. In these examples we have food (The Cakes of Wrath, Grape Expectations, and Kill ‘em with Cayenne to name just a few), bookstores (Book, Line and Sinker and If Books Could Kill), and needlecraft, knitting, crocheting (Skein of the Crime and Thread on Arrival) among others. Cozies, rather than police procedurals, thrillers or uncozy mysteries, tend to be the books that have bepunned titles.
Of course, many books sport punny titles. One of the best, in my inflated opinion, is Eats, Shoots &Leaves, a book on the importance of punctuation (no commas would be a story about a panda, commas tells of a character involved in specific activities)
Spider Robinson, a most excellent author of science fiction tales, has created a series of stories set in a bar called Callahan’s Place. Its denizens, including extraterrestrials, a talking dog and time travelers, listen to visitor’s stories, offer comments, and generally pollute the atmosphere heavily with puns. I think this series of stories truly gave me an appreciation for the gross art of punnery. Nowadays I find myself engaging in it, often against my will, and I fear that it’s just a short step to miming my incarceration in an invisible cube.
I apologize for this blog, but just like with any disease, it’s good to know your enemy in order to best defeat it. Please don’t judge me.
Be sure to visit A Reading Life for more reviews and news of all things happening at the Everett Public Library.
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