Press Release

Max Cryer author talk notice

It has just come to our attention that any online registrations to attend the Max Cryer author talk submitted up until February 9th have not been coming through to our registrations team. While a message has appeared on the website to confirm your registration, the email that would normally be generated has not been and therefore the team have not been able to record names.

So if you have registered to attend this event via the website, please call 838 6839 and we'll ensure you are registered to attend on the day.

If you registered in person or by phone, there are no issues for you.

 

Preposterous Proverbs - author talk with Max Cryer

This session is now full. If you would like to go on the waiting list in case anyone cannot attend please call 838 6839.

Join broadcaster and language expert Max Cryer as he turns his characteristic wry wit on the meaning and truth behind proverbs

  • Wednesday, 22nd February, 2012
    12.30pm
    Hillcrest Library


This author talk is now full.

From our earliest years we have heard proverbs, and many of them are repeated without much thought. Yes, ‘birds of a feather flock together’ and ‘absence makes the heart grow fonder’, but these sayings are so familiar that we are scarcely aware they are proverbs. It has been so for thousands of years, in every culture.

It is only when someone like Max Cryer takes the time to look at them that we can see how these ‘pearls of wisdom’ have played such a key role in the moral guidance of every society. Sometimes the wisdom is distinctly odd, sometimes it has become outdated, and sometimes it is simply contradictory. After all, do ‘many hands make light work’ or do ‘too many cooks spoil the broth’? You can’t really have it both ways.

In Preposterous Proverbs, Max Cryer looks at a vast array of proverbs from around the world. Proverbs on birth, food, women and love rub shoulders with others on money, animals, sin and death. He has chosen some of the most interesting and perplexing, and with his characteristic wry wit he analyses their meaning and truth.

A great book to dip into, Preposterous Proverbs will take you from Greece (‘A thousand men cannot undress a naked man’) and China (‘A dry finger cannot pick up salt’) to Japan (‘Fools and scissors must be carefully handled’) and India (‘A fat spouse is a quilt for the winter’).

  • More about Max
  • Max Cryer is a language expert with many years’ experience of researching and writing on the subject. A well-known broadcaster and entertainer, he hosts a weekly radio slot on quirks of the English language.

    In a long career, he has been a schoolteacher, a compere and television host, as well as a performer on the opera stage in London and in cabaret in Las Vegas and Hollywood. Now a full-time writer living in Auckland, he has written many books, including Who Said That First?, Love Me Tender and The Godzone Dictionary.


    Copies of Preposterous Proverbs will be available for sale at the event through Poppies.