Professor of English Ian Marshall describes Lennon's prose as "mad wordplay", noting Lewis Carroll's influence on his writing style and suggesting the book anticipates the lyrics of Lennon's later songs, including "
Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" and "
I Am the Walrus". In discussing the theme of crowds in Lennon's 1967 songs "
Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!" and "
Good Morning Good Morning", scholar William M. Northcutt suggests that the story "The Wumberlog" pits the crowd against the individual. In the story, a young boy searches for the "Wumberlog" – a group of people who "Wot lived when they were dead". A "carrot" leads the boy to them, only to find that they are digging his grave. The group throw onto his body while mocking him, with Northcutt suggesting that the crowd's cruel
toast of the boy demonstrates Lennon's conflicted feelings regarding crowds. In his 1983 book,
Literary Lennon: A Comedy of Letters, writer James Sauceda provides a
postmodern dissection of both
In His Own Write and
A Spaniard in the Works. Everett describes the book as "a thorough but sometimes wrongheaded postmodern
Finnegans Wake-inspired parsing". Riley calls Sauceda's insights "keen", but suggests more can be understood by analyzing the works with reference to Lennon's biography. For example, Riley suggests that Lennon wrote the poem "Our Dad" after two interactions with his father,
Alfred Lennon, writing that both Alfred and the father character in the poem traveled often. The poem is mostly hostile in its tone before the final lines read: "But he'll remain in all ours hearts/—a buddy and a pal." Riley suggests that the poem's "bitingly satiric reversal" serves to satirise the tendency of British odes to always move towards a happy ending. Asked in an interview about his "sick" humour, Lennon linked it to his school days, while also saying, "If it makes people sick, they're sick. It doesn't appear sick to me". Reflecting on the length of his Sherlock Holmes parody, Lennon said "[i]t seemed like a novel to me", and that he "wrote so many characters in it I forgot who they were". == Legacy ==