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You and your son are quite correct, the stories in My Life and Hard Times require reading aloud.
My younger brothers and I used to read them to one another, and we all cracked up laughing in the same places every time.
I'm pretty sure I could still send either one of my brothers into stitches by calling one of them up and shouting, 'Get Ready! Tom's aCOLD!' or something equally randomly chosen, into the telephone. And I have used, 'The Theater, in our time, has known few such moments.' as a catch-phrase for years, particularly those years I spent in The Theater. It was always a joy when someone's eyes lit up, and I recognized a fellow Thurberphile.
Sadly, my copy of The Clocks of Columbus, that lovely Thurber biography, has disappeared (never lend cherished and hard to replace books, boys and girls!). I still hope to find another in the next used book store, just around the next corner...
The teacher, whose name I've sadly forgotten, read "If Grant Had Been Drinking at Appomomatox". I was the only one in class who laughed out loud, and I did so repeatedly. The others in class looked perplexed and I thought them to be dolts.
It was as if a veil had been lifted from my eyes. Writers could do more, Thurber showed, than traditional narration and description: they could imagine.
That experience was, I guess, about 51 years ago. It remains one of the most formative days of my life; it made me want to become a writer.
BTW, since my blog is about my pit bull Honey, I would like to point out Thurber was a fan of this very maligned breed. Sorry - just had to get that in there...
Thanks so much for this post!!!