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George Ade (1866–1944)

Author of Fables in Slang

46+ Works 410 Members 4 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Courtesy of the NYPL Digital Gallery (image use requires permission from the New York Public Library)

Works by George Ade

Fables in Slang (1899) 87 copies, 2 reviews
More Fables (1900) 33 copies
People You Know (1903) 25 copies
Forty Modern Fables (2008) 21 copies
The Slim Princess (1907) 20 copies
Ade's Fables (1912) 16 copies
The America of George Ade, 1866-1944 (1960) 16 copies, 1 review
Breaking Into Society (2005) 15 copies
In Pastures New (1906) 14 copies
Knocking the Neighbors (1911) 9 copies
Stories of Chicago (2003) 6 copies
True Bills 4 copies
Chicago stories (2017) 4 copies
Letters of George Ade (1999) 3 copies
Circus Day 3 copies
Artie and Pink Marsh (1963) 3 copies
Doc' Horne (1970) 2 copies

Associated Works

Fifty Great American Short Stories (1965) — Contributor — 479 copies, 3 reviews
A Subtreasury of American Humor (1941) — Contributor — 308 copies, 3 reviews
Russell Baker's Book of American Humor (1993) — Contributor — 226 copies
An Anthology of Famous American Stories (1953) — Contributor — 155 copies, 1 review
American Christmas Stories (2021) — Contributor — 84 copies
The Bedside Book of Famous American Stories (1936) — Contributor — 78 copies
Greatest Short Stories, Volume 3: American (1915) — Contributor — 48 copies
An American Omnibus (1933) — Contributor — 34 copies
Great Short Stories of the World: 30 Classic Tales (1991) — Contributor — 29 copies
Humorous American Short Stories [Dover Thrift] (2013) — Contributor — 18 copies
The Family Reader of American Masterpieces (1959) — Contributor — 17 copies
International Short Stories, Volume 1: American Stories (1910) — Contributor; Contributor — 15 copies
Short Story Classics [American], Volume 5 (2017) — Contributor — 13 copies
The Great Modern American Stories: An Anthology (1920) — Contributor — 10 copies
The loving cup; original toasts (1909) — Contributor, some editions — 5 copies
Trumps: A Collection of Short Stories — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1866-09-09
Date of death
1944-05-16
Gender
male
Education
Purdue University
Organizations
American Academy of Arts and Letters (Literature ∙ 1908)
Cliff Dwellers
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Kentland, Indiana, USA
Places of residence
Brook, Indiana, USA
Burial location
Fairlawn Cemetery, Kentland, Indiana, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Indiana, USA

Members

Reviews

8 reviews
This book was published in 1972, as the Christmas limited edition gift of the Westvaco Corporation. It is one of 50 in a series stretching over 50 years. Hence the appeal is to collect the series . It came in a slip case and is a very attractive book , designed by Bradley Thompson George Ade was from Indiana, (dates 1866 to 1944)his writing career peaked at the turn of the century . He wrote newspaper columns , plays and musicals . He was a Broadway success. In fact wrote some 2500 published show more works . In his lifetime his Fables were short moral stories in mid west idiom , language and style , thus his writing is very American in feel . They are a particular genre of American literature. His idol and model was Mark Twain and Ade is regarded as the first American humorist. Extraordinarily, he wrote 10 volumes of fables plus another 250 fables for magazines and newspapers. He was a best seller in his day and became rich on his writings. Westvaco reproduced 26 of the fables in this celebratory issue . I think the annual volumes must have been given as Christmas presents by the corporation . The fables today are rather dated and the morals a bit obscure, the humor is forced and you need to read the tales for their irony. It comes across as a winning formula that appealed to the readers of his era; he had an ear for language and local dialect and the slang is really colloquial speech. I learnt that Hoosier is a name for people from Indiana and I presume the type who would have chuckled at Ade's writing . I am not American so my appreciation lies in the quality of the book and the charm of the Louis Sullivan delicate decorative drawings which preface each tale. The book falls into the collectable quaint category, as a stylish production, with the red embossed red cloth cover . Unless you are a mid westerner buy it for the attractiveness of the book rather than the content . show less
One of the greatest humorists in American literary history, George Ade was a talented teller of tales. His fables in slang provided a transition from the humor of Mark Twain and Artemus Ward to the later twentieth century writers such as Ring Lardner and James Thurber. Jean Shepherd, an outstanding humorist as well, provides an informative introduction while editing this wide-ranging collection of Ade's fables, short stories and essays.
How the Overuse of Capitalization can turn a story into a Fable. Still hilarious after one hundred years.

Awards

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Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
46
Also by
19
Members
410
Popularity
#59,367
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
4
ISBNs
133
Favorited
1

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