The Purple Cow by Gelett Burgess
Picture this: Walter V. Bysbie is on the up and up. He's got a good job, a respectable fiancée, and a clear path to a comfortable life. Then, his eccentric uncle dies and leaves him one thing: a statue of a cow, painted a shocking, violent purple. It's hideous. It's enormous. And it's now his.
The Story
Walter's first instinct is to hide it. He shoves it in a closet, but its garish purple seems to glow through the door. He tries to give it away, but no one wants it. He even attempts to lose it on a train. The cow, however, has other plans. It becomes a social albatross, the punchline to every joke. His serious fiancée, Miss Doxey, is horrified by it and by the notoriety it brings. Walter's quest for a quiet, tasteful existence is completely derailed by this one loud, ridiculous object. His battle against the cow is a series of comic failures, each attempt to dispose of it backfiring spectacularly, pulling him deeper into a world of absurdity he desperately wants to escape.
Why You Should Read It
What struck me is how fresh this feels for a book from 1905. Burgess isn't just writing a silly story about a statue. He's poking fun at social climbing, conformity, and the sheer panic of being associated with something 'uncool.' Walter's desperation is hilarious because we've all been there—stuck with an embarrassing gift, a weird family heirloom, or a piece of junk we can't seem to get rid of. The Purple Cow becomes a symbol for anything that doesn't fit into the neat little boxes we build for our lives. Burgess's humor is dry and clever, and the story moves at a breezy clip. You'll read it with a constant smile, wondering what ridiculous situation the cow will cause next.
Final Verdict
This is a perfect little book for anyone who enjoys classic humor with a bite, fans of P.G. Wodehouse or early Mark Twain. It's also a great pick for readers curious about early 20th-century American satire—it's a window into the social anxieties of the time that still resonate today. At its heart, it's for anyone who's ever felt embarrassed by their own life and fought (often hopelessly) to control how the world sees them. It's a short, sweet, and brilliantly purple reminder that sometimes, the thing you hate the most is what makes your story worth telling.
Elijah Sanchez
1 year agoI started reading out of curiosity and the clarity of the writing makes this accessible. Truly inspiring.