The humour of Spain. by Susette M. Taylor and H. R. Millar

(8 User reviews)   1158
English
Hey, I just finished this little gem I found in a second-hand shop called 'The Humour of Spain.' It's not a novel, but a collection of Spanish jokes, proverbs, and funny stories from the late 1800s, compiled by Susette Taylor and illustrated by H.R. Millar. The 'conflict' here is cultural translation—can humor from another time and place actually make us laugh today? It's a fascinating time capsule. Some jokes land perfectly, others are wonderfully bizarre, and the illustrations are charming. It's like having a chat with a witty, slightly eccentric great-grandparent from Madrid. If you've ever wondered what made people in 19th-century Spain chuckle, this is your direct line to find out. It's short, surprising, and a genuine curiosity.
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Let's clear something up right away: this isn't a storybook. 'The Humour of Spain' is a curated snapshot, a small book that gathers jokes, witty sayings, proverbs, and short anecdotes from Spanish life and literature, all seen through a late-Victorian English lens. Compiled by Susette M. Taylor and brought to life with H.R. Millar's playful illustrations, it's less of a narrative and more of a cultural scavenger hunt.

The Story

There's no plot in the traditional sense. Instead, the book presents a series of vignettes and one-liners. You'll find sharp proverbs about love and money, jokes about priests and peasants, tales of clever beggars and absent-minded scholars, and observations on daily life. It's organized loosely by theme, creating a patchwork of what the compilers found funny or noteworthy about Spanish character and wit at the turn of the 20th century. The 'story' is the journey of discovery itself—flipping a page to find a joke about a donkey or a wisecrack about marriage that has survived for over a century.

Why You Should Read It

This book is a quiet delight for two big reasons. First, it's a direct connection to the past. Reading these jokes is like overhearing conversation in a Madrid café from 1897. Some humor is timeless (the struggles with bureaucracy feel very familiar!), while other bits are wonderfully dated, giving you a real sense of the social world of that era. Second, H.R. Millar's illustrations are fantastic. They're not just decorations; they add a whole extra layer of charm and wit, often telling their own little visual joke alongside the text. It's a book that doesn't take itself too seriously and invites you to do the same.

Final Verdict

This is a perfect book for a curious mind. It's for the person who loves history but hates dry textbooks, for the traveler who enjoys understanding a culture's personality, or for anyone who just likes odd, charming old books. It's not a laugh-a-minute riot, but a smile-inducing, thoughtful browse. Think of it as a literary amuse-bouche—a small, unique taste of another world that leaves you pleasantly surprised.

Richard Taylor
6 months ago

Based on the summary, I decided to read it and it challenges the reader's perspective in an intellectual way. Truly inspiring.

Richard Rodriguez
1 month ago

Citation worthy content.

Michael Perez
1 year ago

I have to admit, the character development leaves a lasting impact. I couldn't put it down.

4
4 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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