Humor is the quality that appeals to the sense of the ludicrous or absurdly incongruous. Humor is not conforming, but it can be absurd and unreasonable, combining fun with tears, laughter with sadness; it can appear foolish or wise; it can ridicule the pompous and strip the emperor of his clothes. Bisquit, the hero of our story, is a humorous character; therefore, he is both funny and sad, foolish and wise-he is a jester; he himself becomes the victim of evildoers because when evil is ridiculed, it seeks revenge. Bisquit bears some similarity to Don Quixote de la Mancha, the fearless knight of old, and some of Bisquit's friends carry the names of the knight's entourage. Don Quixote wanted to become a knight errant "to redress all kinds of grievances and exposing himself to perils and dangers that he would overcome and thus gain eternal fame and renown." We laugh at the antics of Don Quixote because of his delusions. There is something humorous and pathetic about his madness. Bisquit, on the other hand, is not delusionary; he responds with naivet and apparent seriousness to devious criminals and innocent victims of the twenty-first century. The first chapter in this book deals with the adventures of Bisquit as he tries to find the true value of science and art. In subsequent chapters, Bisquit mocks both the innocent and the guilty with his Bisquit Principle. He makes his appearance as a senator from Washington, as the savior of a big corrupt corporation, as a scientific worker in a medical research laboratory, as an arbiter in the fight for salmon between Indians and special-interest groups, and as the sponsor of an alcoholic housewife. He would finally fall victim to those who would ruin our environment. Bisquit may appear funny, but he is deadly serious.
Herman Melville once wrote: "It is--or seems to be--a wise sort of thing, to realise that all that happens to a man in this life is only by way of joke, especially his misfortunes, if he have them." Bing's work, like Melville's Confidence Man, is a satire and a parable of the gullibility and veniality of our civilization. Biscuit is both a con man and a holy man; his adventures in our contemporary world endear him to the reader, and, at the end, we are sad to see him leave the stage.
Delightful & Insightful
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
Dr. Bing once again entertains us with his insightful, delightful intuitive brilliance.
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