Red Herrings & White Elephants: The Origins of the Phrases We Use Everyday
The biggest selling non-fiction book of the decade…..
Mad hatter . . . pie in the sky . . . egg on your face. We use these phrases every day, yet how many of us know what they really mean or where they came from?
From bringing home the bacon to leaving no stone unturned, the English language is peppered with hundreds of common idioms borrowed from ancient traditions and civilizations throughout the world. In Red Herrings and White Elephants, Albert Jack has uncovered the amazing and sometimes downright bizarre stories behind many of our most familiar and eccentric modes of expression:
If you happen to be a bootlegger, your profession recalls the Wild West outlaws who sold illegal alcohol by concealing slender bottles of whiskey in their boots. If you’re on cloud nine, you owe a nod to the American Weather Bureau’s classification of clouds, the ninth topping out all others at a mountainous 40,000 feet. If you opt for the hair of the dog the morning after, you’re following the advice of medieval English doctors, who recommended rubbing the hair of a dog into the wound left by the animal’s bite.
A delightful compendium of anecdotes on everything from minding your p’s and q’s to pulling out all the stops, Red Herrings and White Elephants is an essential handbook for language-lovers of all ages.
Reviewed
‘Albert Jack has all the answers’ – Daily Express
I never questioned the origin of While Elephants, Red Herrings, or any of the other many ideomatic phrases that we use everyday, but a friend of mine bought me this book and I was blown away!
The author has done a stunning job of explaining the stories behind a myriad of phrases.
The book is informative, funny, entertaining, and just incredibly well done.
I have since bought it again to give as gifts.
Great!
—–
This is not the kind of book that you can just sit down and read. It is absolutely mandatory that you have someone nearby that you can tap on the shoulder and ask if they know what a red herring is or a white elephant. And then minutes later you will be bothering them with another gem that you just have to share. And then you interrupt them yet again with another one. Definitely a fun, interactive book.The biggest selling non-fiction book of the decade…..
Mad hatter . . . pie in the sky . . . egg on your face. We use these phrases every day, yet how many of us know what they really mean or where they came from?
From bringing home the bacon to leaving no stone unturned, the English language is peppered with hundreds of common idioms borrowed from ancient traditions and civilizations throughout the world. In Red Herrings and White Elephants, Albert Jack has uncovered the amazing and sometimes downright bizarre stories behind many of our most familiar and eccentric modes of expression:
If you happen to be a bootlegger, your profession recalls the Wild West outlaws who sold illegal alcohol by concealing slender bottles of whiskey in their boots. If you’re on cloud nine, you owe a nod to the American Weather Bureau’s classification of clouds, the ninth topping out all others at a mountainous 40,000 feet. If you opt for the hair of the dog the morning after, you’re following the advice of medieval English doctors, who recommended rubbing the hair of a dog into the wound left by the animal’s bite.
A delightful compendium of anecdotes on everything from minding your p’s and q’s to pulling out all the stops, Red Herrings and White Elephants is an essential handbook for language-lovers of all ages.
Reviewed
‘Albert Jack has all the answers’ – Daily Express
I never questioned the origin of While Elephants, Red Herrings, or any of the other many ideomatic phrases that we use everyday, but a friend of mine bought me this book and I was blown away!
The author has done a stunning job of explaining the stories behind a myriad of phrases.
The book is informative, funny, entertaining, and just incredibly well done.
I have since bought it again to give as gifts.
Great!
—–
This is not the kind of book that you can just sit down and read. It is absolutely mandatory that you have someone nearby that you can tap on the shoulder and ask if they know what a red herring is or a white elephant. And then minutes later you will be bothering them with another gem that you just have to share. And then you interrupt them yet again with another one. Definitely a fun, interactive book.