Best Book Publishers UK | Austin Macauley Publishers

By: Kelvin Roy-Gapper

Aphorisms: Gifted One-Liners

Pages: 135 Ratings: 5.0
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An aphorism may be a polished and pithy piece of distilled philosophy.

Or it could just be, in the words of the 19th-century American writer and cynic, Ambrose Bierce, “predigested wisdom”.

Aphorisms: they are what you make them and what you make of them, perhaps.

In these lively, amusing, and thought-provoking pages, writer Kelvin Roy offers aphorisms from down the ages and for all occasions.

He has accumulated smart one-liners or wry observations from an impressively broad cast of characters which includes unlikely guests at the same table: Heraclitus, Lao Tzu, Michelangelo, inevitably Oscar Wilde, and, somewhat improbably, Keith Richards.

Which proves that aphorisms are like the most shaded part of your anatomy, everyone’s got one.

Roy has collected, collated, and created aphorisms; he lays them out for all to see, herds them into pens of pensiveness, and never labors aphoristic alliteration... unlike some.

This always-amusing collection illustrated by his young son (“Living with a child is like living with a Zen master”) includes aphorisms which can be conversation-stoppers, are finely crafted wisdom to ponder or just “a few words in a fast-paced world”, as he says in his instructive introduction.

Most of these quips, considered observations, or off-the-cuff drolleries have the welcome economy of a koan in this time of information overload, are open questions for an age when people want quick answers; they are wit for the Twitter age and sometimes a contemplative silence in the static and surface noise of the modern world.

Of aphorisms, Roy aphoristically observes, “The idea is to stimulate the maximum amount of thought with a minimum of words.”

And therein lies their reason for being. Aphorisms enlighten, provoke, make you laugh, or simply function as smart one-liners to drop into a conversation.

But, as a wise man says in this marvelously compact book, “Beware the man who speaks in aphorisms.”

Kelvin Roy has been making music for decades, running the gamut, and taking up the gauntlet in graphic graciousness. The alliteration may be pretty, but his new book—Aphorisms: Gifted One-Liners—is a different non-fiction entirely. While he has spent much of his life turning time into space, his new book turns space into timelessness. And his one-liners take up a lot of space in the mind’s eye. For those who want to find, a few words may prove to be just what is sought, which, of course, is thought. 

Customer Reviews
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  • Elsewhere.co.NZ

    In this well-presented 135-page collection he gathers aphorisms from many famous and infamous sources alongside his own creations, some of which are like old maxims (“Togetherness is possible. Solitude inevitable”), others akin to pointed rhymes (“The bigger the range, the more likely the change”) and a few just plain puzzling like a koan (“Overlap, from Zen to Venn”).

    Grouping these various sources and sayings under a couple of dozen general headings (Mistakes, Understanding, Motivation, Inspiration, If . . . and so on), Roy-Gapper offers one of those bedside table books which is best dipped into slowly to let these deep thoughts and small sayings percolate.

    A year ago he sent me a pdf of it and asked if I would be interested in writing a blurb or some such for it. I read it, liked it, offered an aphorism of my own and agreed to write something . . . which is now reproduced on the back cover.

    Most of these quips, considered observations or off-the-cuff drolleries have the welcome economy of a koan in this time of information overload, are open questions for an age when people want quick answers, they are wit for Twitter age and sometimes a contemplative silence in the static and surface noise of the modern world.

    And therein lies their reason for being. Aphorisms enlighten, provoke, make you laugh or simply function as smart one-liner to drop into a conversation.

    But, as a wise man says in this marvelously compact book, “Beware the man who speaks in aphorisms”.


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