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THE DIABOLICAL DICTIONARY OF MODERN ENGLISH <i> by R. W. Jackson (Dell: $5.95) </i>

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A shameless rip-off of Ambrose Bierce’s “The Devil’s Dictionary,” down to the doggerel verse and quotations from imaginary authors. Bierce’s satire was the product of a moral outrage that enabled him to thunder like an Old Testament patriarch and sting like a hive of killer bees. Lacking both the conviction and wit of his model, R. W. Jackson postures with the grace and originality of an 11th-grader trying to write a parody of his high school. Significantly, he fails to define “theft,” “plagiarism” and “literary grave robbing.”

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