Skip to main content
A Good Comb: The Sayings of Muriel Spark

A Good Comb: The Sayings of Muriel Spark

Current price: $13.95
Publication Date: January 30th, 2018
Publisher:
New Directions
ISBN:
9780811227605
Pages:
96

Description

Celebrate the immortal Muriel Spark’s hundredth birthday by imbibing a delicious glass of her bubbly wit 

A Good Comb, a small gift edition of Muriel Spark’s brilliant asides, sayings, and aphorisms, is a book for sheer enjoyment. No writer offers such lively, pointed, puckish insights: "Neurotics are awfully quick to notice other people’s mentalities." "It is impossible to persuade a man who does not disagree, but smiles." "The sacrifice of pleasure is of course itself a pleasure." "It is impossible to repent of love. The sin of love does not exist." "She wasn’t a person to whom things happen." "You look for one thing and you find another." "It calms you down, a good comb."

Her scope is great and her striking insights are precise and unforgettable. This book will entertain you? It will even help you live your life. Drink in the pleasures of this little volume along with the benefits of taking up such advice as "Never make excuses but if you must, never make more than one? It gives the appearance of insincerity." And "Beware of men bearing flowers."

About the Author

Muriel Spark (1918–2006) was the author of dozens of novels, including The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, Memento Mori, A Far Cry from Kensington, The Girls of Slender Means, The Ballad of Peckham Rye, The Driver’s Seat, and many more. She became Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1993.

Praise for A Good Comb: The Sayings of Muriel Spark

A wonderful writer.
— James Wood

The most original and innovative British novelist.
— The New York Review of Books

Spark is an enduring literary influence.
— Vogue

Surely the most engaging, tantalizing writer we have.
— Frank Kermode - The London Review of Books

A major twentieth-century writer and an extraordinary and unique talent: her
gifts were unusual—a piercing eye; an acute ear; an incisive, often caustic wit.
— The Chicago Tribune