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Thoughtful outsiders take on the US by Stephen Fry (stephenfry.com)
41 points by sharpn on July 5, 2009 | hide | past | favorite | 7 comments



He does a wonderful job of putting into words what I, an American, like about the U.S. I'm glad somebody else sees our enthusiasm, optimism, and naivety in the same positive light I sometimes do. I just want to stress that I found his insightful appreciation of the United States the most enjoyable aspect of the article before quoting this most hilarious and quotable criticism:

"So let me look again at that holy text: ‘if life gives you lemons, make lemonade.’ Huh? But… but… Lemons are amongst the best and most wonderful gifts of nature. They are adaptable, versatile and delicious. A slice for your gin and tonic – juice to zing life into salads, stews, fish and seafood. Oil and sweetness from the rind and zest that is pure and perfumed and precious. They are a staple of what doctors agree is the best dietary regimen we can follow. So if life gives you lemons, shout ‘Thank you, Life, thank you!’ But the American response is ‘make lemonade,’ in other words – just add sugar and sell it."


I was going to quote that final sentence here, as well. What a phrase to sum up American enterprise throughout the ages!

I am, as always, in awe of Colonel Fry.


For anyone interested, I have posted a link to Mr. Fry's tribute to P.G. Wodehouse, written in 2000.

It is entitled "What ho My hero, PG Wodehouse."

http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=689217

Notable quote: "Without Wodehouse I am not sure that I would be a tenth of what I am today."


I do not always agree with Stephen Fry but find him to be one of the most thoughtful commentators around on almost any subject, full of sharp insights and with a writing and speaking style graced by innumerable felicities.

A most worthy follower of P.G. Wodehouse.

He even makes poetry interesting ("An Ode Less Travelled" is his quite fascinating book on this otherwise often dull subject).

Anyone wanting to develop strong skills in communication would do well to study his style closely.

This piece is very long, and even rambling, but a joy to read from the standpoint of style alone.


I think the style was the only thing that kept me reading... truly smart and smooth.


my first thought was Canadian soldiers quoting Shakespeare as they launched across the great lakes...


I was surprised nobody had submitted it to Digg yet...

http://digg.com/political_opinion/America_s_Place_In_The_Wor...




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