Book:  “The Meaning of Everything” by Simon Winchester

 

Dear Commons Community,

I have just finished reading, The Meaning of Everything: The Story of the Oxford English Dictionary,  by Simon Winchester.  It is an historical account of the development of the Oxford English Dictionary (OED).   I decided to read it as a follow-up to the historical novel The Dictionary of Lost Words  by Pip Williams that I read a few weeks ago.   

Winchester has done a fine job of tracing the development of the OED.  He is masterful in chronicling  the individuals who took on this monumental task. James Murray, the main editor, receives a good deal of attention and rightfully so for steering the OED development for most of its 70-year development.  Winchester also does an excellent job of describing the tensions between Oxford University Press and the editors much of which related to the cost and length of time it took to produce the OED.  Originally, it was estimated to cost £9,000. and take ten years to complete. It actually ended up costing £375,000.  and seven decades to complete.

Lastly, Winchester also includes a number of photos and images that are fascinating to examine.

In sum, I highly recommend The Meaning of Everything for anyone interested in how the OED came to be.

Below is a brief review of The Meaning of Everything… that appeared in Publishers Weekly.

Tony


Publishers Weekly

THE MEANING OF EVERYTHING: The Story of the Oxford English Dictionary

Simon Winchester, . . Oxford Univ., $25 (260pp) ISBN 978-0-19-860702-1

With his usual winning blend of scholarship and accessible, skillfully paced narrative, Winchester (Krakatoa) returns to the subject of his first bestseller, The Professor and the Madman, to tell the eventful, personality-filled history of the definitive English dictionary. He emphasizes that the OED project began in 1857 as an attempt to correct the deficiencies of existing dictionaries, such as Dr. Samuel Johnson’s. Winchester opens with an entertaining and informative examination of the development of the English language and pre-OED efforts. The originators of the OED thought the project would take perhaps a decade; it actually took 71 years, and Winchester explores why. An early editor, Frederick Furnivall, was completely disorganized (one sack of paperwork he shipped to his successor, James Murray, contained a family of mice). Murray in turn faced obstacles from Oxford University Press, which initially wanted to cut costs at the expense of quality. Winchester stresses the immensity and difficulties of the project, which required hundreds of volunteer readers and assistants (including J.R.R. Tolkien) to create and organize millions of documents: the word bondmaid was left out of the first edition because its paperwork was lost. Winchester successfully brings readers inside the day-to-day operations of the massive project and shows us the unrelenting passion of people such as Murray and his overworked, underpaid staff who, in the end, succeeded magnificently. Winchester’s book will be required reading for word mavens and anyone interested in the history of our marvelous, ever-changing language.

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