The Meaning of Everything The Story of the Oxford English Dictionary
by Simon Winchester
In this fast-paced narrative,
the reader will discover lively portraits of such key figures
as the brilliant but tubercular first editor Herbert Coleridge
(grandson of the poet), the colorful, boisterous Frederick
Furnivall (who left the project in a shambles), and James
Augustus Henry Murray, who spent a half-century bringing the
project to fruition. Winchester lovingly describes the nuts-and-bolts
of dictionary making--how unexpectedly tricky the dictionary
entry for marzipan was, or how fraternity turned out so much
longer and monkey so much more ancient that anticipated--and
how bondmaid was left out completely, its slips found lurking
under a pile of books long after the B-volume had gone to
press. We visit the ugly corrugated iron structure that Murray
grandly dubbed the Scriptorium--the Scrippy or the Shed, as
locals called it--and meet some of the legion of volunteers,
from Fitzedward Hall, a bitter hermit obsessively devoted
to the OED, to W. C. Minor, whose story is one of dangerous
madness, ineluctable sadness, and ultimate redemption. The
Meaning of Everything is a scintillating account of the
creation of the greatest monument ever erected to a living
language. Simon Winchester's supple, vigorous prose illuminates
this dauntingly ambitious project--a seventy-year odyssey
to create the grandfather of all word-books, the world's unrivalled
uber-dictionary.