TY - BOOK AU - Nye,Bill AU - Gunn,John W. AU - Haldeman-Julius,E. TI - The humor of "Bill" Nye T2 - Little blue book, no. 771 AV - PN PY - 2026/// CY - Salt Lake City, UT PB - Project Gutenberg KW - American wit and humor N1 - Release date is 2026-05-16; Introduction -- Words about Washington -- B. Franklin, deceased -- The discovery of America -- The Puritans -- Nero -- A singular "Hamlet" [James Owen O'Connor] -- The dubious future -- A thrilling experience -- A resign -- A guest at the Ludlow; Carla Foust, Tim Miller and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net; Originally published; Girard: Haldeman-Julius Company, 1924 N2 - The humor of "Bill" Nye by Bill Nye is a collection of comic essays and satirical sketches written in the late 19th to early 20th century. It is humor/nonfiction, assembled to showcase a frontier newspaperman’s irreverent take on history, public life, and everyday absurdities. An opening introduction frames the appeal as boisterous, boyish, and anti-heroic, delighting in deflating piety and pretension. The likely topic is a breezy send-up of famous figures, American institutions, and modern habits, delivered through deadpan exaggeration and playful misuse of grand language. The pieces range from mock-historical portraits—of Washington as both revered and comically human, Franklin as an industrious printer-scientist rendered in slapstick superlatives, Columbus as a job-seeking “discoverer” courting royal funding, the Puritans as clam-digging moral policers, and even Nero as a thin-skinned tyrant—to social and cultural lampoons. A disastrous “Hamlet” performance is skewered as vanity and ineptitude; a faux-scientific forecast imagines how oysters, gadgets, and leisure will deform the “coming man”; a midnight “burglary” turns out to be a hissing radiator; a mock-official resignation from a small post office brims with bureaucratic pomposity; and a wry jailhouse visit catalogs food, class pecking orders, and small humiliations. Across the book the voice stays jaunty and colloquial, using mock-heroic diction, skewed logic, and relentless deflation to trade solemn hero-worship for loud, restorative laughter. (This is an automatically generated summary.) UR - https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78694 ER -