Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Timed for a presidential election year, this sassy, smart book outlines and illustrates nearly every rhetorical trope and flourish related to the art of persuasion. Following precepts gleaned from the masters of this art, Leith can be fiendishly entertaining while he goes against the grain of our age, one in which rhetoric is generally looked upon with the same suspicion that Plato viewed the Sophists: as spin doctors of their day. Modern America's discomfort with anything but plain style or memorization makes it even more difficult for hopeful practitioners to gain traction in the traditional craft of oral communication. A study of Hitler's oratory and a priceless analysis of Richard Nixon's "Checkers Speech" further prove one of the central tenets of this anxiety: "Rhetoric's effectiveness is, in the final analysis, independent of its moral content or that of its users." Thus, the lessons of Aristotle, Demosthenes, Cicero, Quintilian, Lincoln, Churchill, Martin Luther King Jr., presidents Obama and Reagan speechwriter Peggy Noonan, and others, provide the foundation for a potential resurgence of this craft. Agent: George Lucas, Inkwell Management (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Former Daily Telegraph literary editor Leith (The Coincidence Engine, 2012, etc.) brings to life a forgotten but eternally essential subject. "What is democracy," asks the author, "but the idea that the art of persuasion should be formally enshrined at the center of the political process?" The art and science of persuasion, so central to politics, the law, literature, love and, indeed, human society itself, has fallen on hard times. Once the capstone of the triumvirate--grammar, logic, rhetoric--that formed the basis of a liberal education, rhetoric is now seen as something to be distrusted, and its place in the academy has been supplanted by upstarts like critical theory and linguistics. Leith uses every tool in the rhetorician's arsenal to argue for rhetoric's continuing relevance (even disdain for rhetoric is a transparently rhetorical device, for "the most effective rhetoric is often the least obviously rhetorical"). His contention that "[e]xplaining rhetoric to a human being is, or should be, like explaining water to a fish" is somewhat belied by his use of extensive use of such terms as pleonasm, hypallage, enargia and zeugma. However, persistent readers will gain a great deal of insight into how humans use communication to get what they want. With chapters on each of the five parts of rhetoric and the three branches of oratory, and spotlights on "champions of rhetoric" from Satan to Obama, the book fulfills Cicero's three objectives of rhetoric: "to move, educate, and delight." Required reading for aspiring writers, lawyers, politicians and marketers.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.