John Kendrick Bangs (1862-1922) was born in Yonkers, New York, and is
known for his work as an author, editor, and satirist. He worked for
"Life", a number of "Harper's" periodicals, and "Puck", perhaps the
foremost American humour magazine of its day. In "Alice in Blunderland:
An Iridescent Dream"-first published in 1907-Bangs makes light of a
range of economic issues familiar to his readers-these are quite topical
and all-too familiar to today's reader as well. High taxes, corporate
greed, bribery, institutional corruption, and govern-mental incompetence
are amongst the themes of the book. Bangs' "Alice in Blunderland" relies
more on absurdity than it does on nonsense, and some of the humour is
indeed rather American. But Bangs' success is to make his reader smile
wryly rather than laugh out loud-for his satire is very much on target.