The murals in restaurants are on a par with the food in museums.
America is an enormous frosted cupcake in the middle of millions of
starving people.
Critics are like pigs at the pastry cart.
Describing something by relating it to another thing is the essence of
metaphorical thought. It is one of the oldest activities of
humankind--and one of the most impressive when done skillfully.
Throughout history, many masters of metaphor have crafted observations
that are so spectacular they have taken up a permanent residence in our
minds.
In I Never Metaphor I Didn't Like, quotation maven Dr. Mardy Grothe
fixes his attention on the three superstars of figurative
language--analogies, metaphors, and similes. The result is an
extraordinary compilation of nearly 2,000 feats of association that will
entertain, educate, and occasionally inspire quotation lovers
everywhere.
In this intellectual smorgasbord, the author of Oxymoronica and Viva
la Repartee explains figurative language in a refreshingly
down-to-earth way before taking readers on a tour of history's greatest
word pictures. In chapters on wit, love, sex, stage and screen, insults,
politics, sports, and more, you will find quotations from Aristotle and
Maya Angelou to George Washington and Oprah Winfrey.