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Press Coverage
 Ralph Keyes has come up
with what he calls an immutable law of misquotation. Here it is:
"Misquotes drive out real quotes." And he's researched and put together
a book to prove it.
Noah Adams,
All Things Considered
Often pithy sayings we've
always attributed to various famous figures, such as Winston Churchill,
didn't really come from their mouths. Ralph Keyes calls this "the
flypaper effect."
Robert Siegel,
All Things Considered
I am indebted to Ralph
Keyes's new quotation corrector.
Edmund Morris,
New York Times
Icon-busting.
William Safire,
New York Times Magazine
The only thing necessary
for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." If you want to
find out how some of us have broken our heads to find the coiner of
that, get "Nice Guys Finish Seventh": False Phrases, Spurious
Sayings, and Familiar Misquotations by Ralph Keyes.
William Safire,
New York Times Magazine
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