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A Spaniard in the Works

A Spaniard in the Works is a nonsense book by English musician John Lennon, first published on 24 June 1965. The book consists of nonsensical stories and drawings similar to the style of his previous book, 1964's In His Own Write.[1] The name is a pun on the expression "a spanner in the works".[2]

A Spaniard in the Works
First edition
AuthorJohn Lennon
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Genre
Published24 June 1965 by Jonathan Cape
Media typePrint
OCLC252932871
Preceded byIn His Own Write 
Followed bySkywriting by Word of Mouth 

Sales of the book were lower than Lennon's first book, with 100,000 copies bought in the three months following publication.[3]

Background edit

The second book was more disciplined because it was started from scratch. They said, "You've got so many months to write a book in." I wrote In His Own Write – at least some of it – while I was still at school, and it came spontaneously. But once it became: "We want another book from you, Mr. Lennon," I could only loosen up to it with a bottle of Johnnie Walker, and I thought, "If it takes a bottle every night to get me to write ..." That's why I didn't write any more.[4]

John Lennon on writing A Spaniard in the Works, 1965

While some of John Lennon's first book, In His Own Write, had been written years earlier, he mostly wrote A Spaniard in the Works over the course of 1964.[5] Beatles road manager Neil Aspinall recalled Lennon writing some of the book in Paris in January 1964[6] – predating the 23 March 1964 publication of In His Own Write[7] – and bandmate George Harrison recalled Lennon writing while the two holidayed with their partners, Pattie Boyd and Cynthia Lennon, in Tahiti in May 1964. Harrison, Boyd and Cynthia contributed lines, with Lennon sometimes inquiring of them for words that would work better in a particular sentence.[8] During the same holiday, Lennon occupied himself by reading the books left on their private boat, including a complete set of Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories. Recognising the formula the stories employed, he spent three weeks writing a parody.[9]

When most of the book was complete, the publisher, Jonathan Cape, requested more material from Lennon. To encourage him, they sent an Italian dictionary, which Lennon read through and found "a howl on its own". Despite further publisher requests that some material be removed or changed, Lennon argued for everything to be kept so as to maintain the work's spontaneity.[4]

Content edit

Jonathan Cape published A Spaniard in the Works in the UK on 24 June 1965, retailing for 10s 6d.[10] Publication in the US followed on 1 July.[11] Less inhibited than In His Own Write in terms of both writing style and length, some of the book's pieces run for five or six pages,[12] including the Sherlock Holmes parody "The Singularge Experience of Miss Anne Duffield", which runs nine pages.[13] The book has 56 pieces,[13] including twelve prose pieces, six poems and 38 drawings.[14] A piece titled "The General Erection" satirises the UK's 1964 general election.[15]

The book includes numerous references to racial minorities, as well as characters with deformities and disabilities.[16] The title piece, for example, opens: "Jesus El Pifco was a foreigner and he knew it ... a garlic eating, stinking, little yellow greasy fascist bastard catholic Spaniard."[17] In the piece "Our Dad", a father is kicked out of his home by his sons:[18]

"You don't want me around," he said,
"I'm old and crippled too."
We didn't have the heart to say
"You're bloody right it's true."

Of the book's drawings, one depicts two street buskers, both wearing signs, one of whose states "I Am Blind" while the other reads "I Can See Quite Clearly".[19] Another drawing depicts a large man with glasses, sitting in a chair looking at a four legged green monster.[20]

Reception edit

A Spaniard in the Works became an immediate best seller,[21] going through four printings in its first four months and ultimately selling over 100,000 copies.[22] Critically, reviewers were generally unenthusiastic, considering the book similar to In His Own Write but without the benefit of being unexpected.[23]

Describing its parodies as forced, author Jonathan Gould opines that the writing of A Spaniard in the Works was not up to the standard set by In His Own Write. Still, he calls the book's punning inspired, especially that found in "The General Erection".[5] Critic John Harris describes the book as a "more warped compendium" than its predecessor,[24] and that the satiric piece "The General Erection" proved that Lennon "had a little more political nous than he let on".[15] Critic Tim Riley writes that the book was more hastily written than Lennon's first book, yet also more ambitious, with much more wordplay and more genre parodies.[25] He writes that "[d]etonating conformity was one of the few themes Lennon's pen mastered", though his drawings were more elegant in conveying "emotional mayhem".[26]

Analysis edit

Professor of English Ian Marshall describes Lennon's prose as "mad wordplay", noting Lewis Carroll's influence on his writing style and suggesting the book anticipates the lyrics of Lennon's later songs, including "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" and "I Am the Walrus".[27] In discussing the theme of crowds in Lennon's 1967 songs "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!" and "Good Morning Good Morning", scholar William M. Northcutt suggests that the story "The Wumberlog" pits the crowd against the individual.[28] In the story, a young boy searches for the "Wumberlog" – a group of people who "Wot lived when they were dead". A "carrot" leads the boy to them, only to find that they are digging his grave. The group throw onto his body while mocking him, with Northcutt suggesting that the crowd's cruel toast of the boy demonstrates Lennon's conflicted feelings regarding crowds.[29]

In his 1983 book, Literary Lennon: A Comedy of Letters, writer James Sauceda provides a postmodern dissection of both In His Own Write and A Spaniard in the Works.[30] Everett describes the book as "a thorough but sometimes wrongheaded postmodern Finnegans Wake-inspired parsing".[31] Riley calls Sauceda's insights "keen", but suggests more can be understood by analyzing the works with reference to Lennon's biography.[32] For example, Riley suggests that Lennon wrote the poem "Our Dad" after two interactions with his father, Alfred Lennon, writing that both Alfred and the father character in the poem traveled often. The poem is mostly hostile in its tone before the final lines read: "But he'll remain in all ours hearts/—a buddy and a pal."[33] Riley suggests that the poem's "bitingly satiric reversal" serves to satirise the tendency of British odes to always move towards a happy ending.[34]

Asked in an interview about his "sick" humour, Lennon linked it to his school days, while also saying, "If it makes people sick, they're sick. It doesn't appear sick to me".[35] Reflecting on the length of his Sherlock Holmes parody, Lennon said "[i]t seemed like a novel to me", and that he "wrote so many characters in it I forgot who they were".[13]

Legacy edit

In her study of Beatles historiography, historian Erin Torkelson Weber suggests that it reinforced perceptions of Lennon as "the smart one" of the group, and that the band's first film A Hard Day's Night further emphasised that view.[36]

A Spaniard in the Works was the last collection of Lennon's writing published in his lifetime.[37] Lennon began writing a third collection, planned for release in February 1966, but abandoned the project soon after. McCall's published the lone completed poem, "The Toy Boy", in its December 1966 issue.[38] Harper & Row published a posthumous collection of Lennon writings in 1986.[39] The collection, Skywriting by Word of Mouth, mostly consists of writings made during Lennon's "house-husband" period during his late 1970s break from recording.[40]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Ulin, David L. (October 8, 2010). "Book review: 'In His Own Write' and 'A Spaniard in the Works' by John Lennon". LA Times. Retrieved April 6, 2016.
  2. ^ . Penn State News. Archived from the original on April 20, 2016. Retrieved April 6, 2016.
  3. ^ "John Lennon's a Spaniard in the Works is published". 24 June 1965.
  4. ^ a b The Beatles 2000, p. 176.
  5. ^ a b Gould 2007, pp. 270–271.
  6. ^ The Beatles 2000, p. 112.
  7. ^ Miles 2007, p. 117.
  8. ^ The Beatles 2000, p. 135.
  9. ^ The Beatles 2000, p. 137.
  10. ^ Miles 2007, pp. 162–163.
  11. ^ Miles 2007, p. 163.
  12. ^ Gould 2007, p. 270.
  13. ^ a b c Ingham 2009, p. 222.
  14. ^ Sauceda 1983, p. 196.
  15. ^ a b Harris 2004a, p. 109.
  16. ^ Howlett & Lewisohn 1990, p. 44.
  17. ^ quoted in Howlett & Lewisohn 1990, p. 44.
  18. ^ quoted in Howlett & Lewisohn 1990, p. 44.
  19. ^ quoted in Howlett & Lewisohn 1990, pp. 44–45.
  20. ^ Wood 1968, quoted in Wood 2004, p. 145
  21. ^ Burns 2009, p. 221.
  22. ^ Savage 2010, p. ix.
  23. ^ Ingham 2009, pp. 221–222.
  24. ^ Harris 2004b, p. 119.
  25. ^ Riley 2011, p. 276–277.
  26. ^ Riley 2011, pp. 277–278.
  27. ^ Marshall 2006, p. 17.
  28. ^ Northcutt 2006, pp. 143–144.
  29. ^ Northcutt 2006, p. 144.
  30. ^ Everett 2001, pp. 396n26, 429.
  31. ^ Everett 2001, p. 396n26.
  32. ^ Riley 2011, p. 263.
  33. ^ quoted in Riley 2011, p. 277
  34. ^ Riley 2011, p. 277.
  35. ^ Howlett & Lewisohn 1990, pp. 44–45.
  36. ^ Weber 2016, p. 31.
  37. ^ Howlett & Lewisohn 1990, p. 46.
  38. ^ Everett 2001, p. 406n48.
  39. ^ Burns 2009, p. 278n7.
  40. ^ Howlett & Lewisohn 1990, p. 50.

Sources edit

Books edit

Book chapters edit

Magazine articles edit

  • Wood, Michael (27 June 1968). "John Lennon's schooldays". New Society. pp. 948–949. ISSN 0028-6729.

External links edit

spaniard, works, nonsense, book, english, musician, john, lennon, first, published, june, 1965, book, consists, nonsensical, stories, drawings, similar, style, previous, book, 1964, write, name, expression, spanner, works, first, editionauthorjohn, lennoncount. A Spaniard in the Works is a nonsense book by English musician John Lennon first published on 24 June 1965 The book consists of nonsensical stories and drawings similar to the style of his previous book 1964 s In His Own Write 1 The name is a pun on the expression a spanner in the works 2 A Spaniard in the WorksFirst editionAuthorJohn LennonCountryUnited KingdomLanguageEnglishGenreLiterary nonsense Surreal poetryPublished24 June 1965 by Jonathan CapeMedia typePrintOCLC252932871Preceded byIn His Own Write Followed bySkywriting by Word of Mouth Sales of the book were lower than Lennon s first book with 100 000 copies bought in the three months following publication 3 Contents 1 Background 2 Content 3 Reception 4 Analysis 5 Legacy 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Sources 6 2 1 Books 6 2 2 Book chapters 6 2 3 Magazine articles 7 External linksBackground editFurther information In His Own Write The second book was more disciplined because it was started from scratch They said You ve got so many months to write a book in I wrote In His Own Write at least some of it while I was still at school and it came spontaneously But once it became We want another book from you Mr Lennon I could only loosen up to it with a bottle of Johnnie Walker and I thought If it takes a bottle every night to get me to write That s why I didn t write any more 4 John Lennon on writing A Spaniard in the Works 1965 While some of John Lennon s first book In His Own Write had been written years earlier he mostly wrote A Spaniard in the Works over the course of 1964 5 Beatles road manager Neil Aspinall recalled Lennon writing some of the book in Paris in January 1964 6 predating the 23 March 1964 publication of In His Own Write 7 and bandmate George Harrison recalled Lennon writing while the two holidayed with their partners Pattie Boyd and Cynthia Lennon in Tahiti in May 1964 Harrison Boyd and Cynthia contributed lines with Lennon sometimes inquiring of them for words that would work better in a particular sentence 8 During the same holiday Lennon occupied himself by reading the books left on their private boat including a complete set of Arthur Conan Doyle s Sherlock Holmes stories Recognising the formula the stories employed he spent three weeks writing a parody 9 When most of the book was complete the publisher Jonathan Cape requested more material from Lennon To encourage him they sent an Italian dictionary which Lennon read through and found a howl on its own Despite further publisher requests that some material be removed or changed Lennon argued for everything to be kept so as to maintain the work s spontaneity 4 Content editJonathan Cape published A Spaniard in the Works in the UK on 24 June 1965 retailing for 10s 6d 10 Publication in the US followed on 1 July 11 Less inhibited than In His Own Write in terms of both writing style and length some of the book s pieces run for five or six pages 12 including the Sherlock Holmes parody The Singularge Experience of Miss Anne Duffield which runs nine pages 13 The book has 56 pieces 13 including twelve prose pieces six poems and 38 drawings 14 A piece titled The General Erection satirises the UK s 1964 general election 15 The book includes numerous references to racial minorities as well as characters with deformities and disabilities 16 The title piece for example opens Jesus El Pifco was a foreigner and he knew it a garlic eating stinking little yellow greasy fascist bastard catholic Spaniard 17 In the piece Our Dad a father is kicked out of his home by his sons 18 You don t want me around he said I m old and crippled too We didn t have the heart to say You re bloody right it s true Of the book s drawings one depicts two street buskers both wearing signs one of whose states I Am Blind while the other reads I Can See Quite Clearly 19 Another drawing depicts a large man with glasses sitting in a chair looking at a four legged green monster 20 Reception editA Spaniard in the Works became an immediate best seller 21 going through four printings in its first four months and ultimately selling over 100 000 copies 22 Critically reviewers were generally unenthusiastic considering the book similar to In His Own Write but without the benefit of being unexpected 23 Describing its parodies as forced author Jonathan Gould opines that the writing of A Spaniard in the Works was not up to the standard set by In His Own Write Still he calls the book s punning inspired especially that found in The General Erection 5 Critic John Harris describes the book as a more warped compendium than its predecessor 24 and that the satiric piece The General Erection proved that Lennon had a little more political nous than he let on 15 Critic Tim Riley writes that the book was more hastily written than Lennon s first book yet also more ambitious with much more wordplay and more genre parodies 25 He writes that d etonating conformity was one of the few themes Lennon s pen mastered though his drawings were more elegant in conveying emotional mayhem 26 Analysis editProfessor of English Ian Marshall describes Lennon s prose as mad wordplay noting Lewis Carroll s influence on his writing style and suggesting the book anticipates the lyrics of Lennon s later songs including Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds and I Am the Walrus 27 In discussing the theme of crowds in Lennon s 1967 songs Being for the Benefit of Mr Kite and Good Morning Good Morning scholar William M Northcutt suggests that the story The Wumberlog pits the crowd against the individual 28 In the story a young boy searches for the Wumberlog a group of people who Wot lived when they were dead A carrot leads the boy to them only to find that they are digging his grave The group throw onto his body while mocking him with Northcutt suggesting that the crowd s cruel toast of the boy demonstrates Lennon s conflicted feelings regarding crowds 29 In his 1983 book Literary Lennon A Comedy of Letters writer James Sauceda provides a postmodern dissection of both In His Own Write and A Spaniard in the Works 30 Everett describes the book as a thorough but sometimes wrongheaded postmodern Finnegans Wake inspired parsing 31 Riley calls Sauceda s insights keen but suggests more can be understood by analyzing the works with reference to Lennon s biography 32 For example Riley suggests that Lennon wrote the poem Our Dad after two interactions with his father Alfred Lennon writing that both Alfred and the father character in the poem traveled often The poem is mostly hostile in its tone before the final lines read But he ll remain in all ours hearts a buddy and a pal 33 Riley suggests that the poem s bitingly satiric reversal serves to satirise the tendency of British odes to always move towards a happy ending 34 Asked in an interview about his sick humour Lennon linked it to his school days while also saying If it makes people sick they re sick It doesn t appear sick to me 35 Reflecting on the length of his Sherlock Holmes parody Lennon said i t seemed like a novel to me and that he wrote so many characters in it I forgot who they were 13 Legacy editIn her study of Beatles historiography historian Erin Torkelson Weber suggests that it reinforced perceptions of Lennon as the smart one of the group and that the band s first film A Hard Day s Night further emphasised that view 36 A Spaniard in the Works was the last collection of Lennon s writing published in his lifetime 37 Lennon began writing a third collection planned for release in February 1966 but abandoned the project soon after McCall s published the lone completed poem The Toy Boy in its December 1966 issue 38 Harper amp Row published a posthumous collection of Lennon writings in 1986 39 The collection Skywriting by Word of Mouth mostly consists of writings made during Lennon s house husband period during his late 1970s break from recording 40 References editCitations edit Ulin David L October 8 2010 Book review In His Own Write and A Spaniard in the Works by John Lennon LA Times Retrieved April 6 2016 50 Years of Beatles John Lennon s In His Own Write Penn State News Archived from the original on April 20 2016 Retrieved April 6 2016 John Lennon s a Spaniard in the Works is published 24 June 1965 a b The Beatles 2000 p 176 a b Gould 2007 pp 270 271 The Beatles 2000 p 112 Miles 2007 p 117 The Beatles 2000 p 135 The Beatles 2000 p 137 Miles 2007 pp 162 163 Miles 2007 p 163 Gould 2007 p 270 a b c Ingham 2009 p 222 Sauceda 1983 p 196 a b Harris 2004a p 109 Howlett amp Lewisohn 1990 p 44 quoted in Howlett amp Lewisohn 1990 p 44 quoted in Howlett amp Lewisohn 1990 p 44 quoted in Howlett amp Lewisohn 1990 pp 44 45 Wood 1968 quoted in Wood 2004 p 145 Burns 2009 p 221 Savage 2010 p ix Ingham 2009 pp 221 222 Harris 2004b p 119 Riley 2011 p 276 277 Riley 2011 pp 277 278 Marshall 2006 p 17 Northcutt 2006 pp 143 144 Northcutt 2006 p 144 Everett 2001 pp 396n26 429 Everett 2001 p 396n26 Riley 2011 p 263 quoted in Riley 2011 p 277 Riley 2011 p 277 Howlett amp Lewisohn 1990 pp 44 45 Weber 2016 p 31 Howlett amp Lewisohn 1990 p 46 Everett 2001 p 406n48 Burns 2009 p 278n7 Howlett amp Lewisohn 1990 p 50 Sources edit Books edit Beatles the 2000 The Beatles Anthology San Francisco Chronicle Books ISBN 0 8118 2684 8 Everett Walter 2001 The Beatles as Musicians the Quarry Men through Rubber Soul New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 514105 4 Gould Jonathan 2007 Can t Buy Me Love The Beatles Britain and America New York Harmony Books ISBN 978 0 307 35337 5 Howlett Kevin Lewisohn Mark 1990 In My Life John Lennon Remembered London BBC Books ISBN 0 563 36105 0 Ingham Chris 2009 The Rough Guide to the Beatles 3rd ed London Rough Guides ISBN 978 1 84836 525 4 Miles Barry 2007 1998 The Beatles A Diary An Intimate Day by Day History London Omnibus ISBN 978 1 84772 082 5 Riley Tim 2011 Lennon The Man the Myth the Music The Definitive Life New York Hyperion ISBN 978 1 4013 2452 0 Sauceda James 1983 The Literary Lennon A Comedy of Letters The First Study of All the Major and Minor Writings of John Lennon Ann Arbor Pierian Press ISBN 0 87650 161 7 Weber Erin Torkelson 2016 The Beatles and the Historians An Analysis of Writings About the Fab Four Jefferson McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 1 4766 2470 9 Book chapters edit Burns Gary 2009 Beatles news product line extensions and the rock canon In Womack Kenneth ed The Cambridge Companion to the Beatles Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 217 229 ISBN 978 0 521 68976 2 Harris John 2004a Poll Position In Trynka Paul ed The Beatles Ten Years that Shook the World London Dorling Kindersley p 109 ISBN 0 7566 0670 5 Harris John 2004b Syntax Man In Trynka Paul ed The Beatles Ten Years that Shook the World London Dorling Kindersley pp 118 119 ISBN 0 7566 0670 5 Marshall Ian 2006 I am he as you are he as you are me and we are all together Bakhtin and the Beatles In Womack Kenneth Davis Todd F eds Reading the Beatles Cultural Studies Literary Criticism and the Fab Four Albany State University of New York Press pp 9 35 ISBN 0 7914 6716 3 Northcutt William M 2006 The Spectacle of Alienation Death Loss and the Crowd in Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band In Womack Kenneth Davis Todd F eds Reading the Beatles Cultural Studies Literary Criticism and the Fab Four Albany State University of New York Press pp 129 146 ISBN 0 7914 6716 3 Savage Jon 2010 Foreword In His Own Write and A Spaniard in the Works By Lennon John London Vintage Books pp xii x ISBN 978 0 09 953042 8 Wood Michael 2004 John Lennon s schooldays In Thomson Elizabeth Gutman David eds The Lennon Companion Twenty five Years of Comment Updated and Expanded ed Cambridge Da Capo Press pp 145 149 ISBN 0 585 49984 5 Magazine articles edit Wood Michael 27 June 1968 John Lennon s schooldays New Society pp 948 949 ISSN 0028 6729 External links editA Spaniard in the Works in libraries WorldCat catalog A Spaniard in the Works at Google Books Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A Spaniard in the Works amp oldid 1167447319, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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