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Righting the Mother Tongue - by David Wolman (Paperback)

Righting the Mother Tongue - by  David Wolman (Paperback)
Store: Target
Last Price: 14.99 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Wolman offers an engaging narrative that spells out the history of the English language and the people who have tried to make spelling make sense.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>When did <em>ghost</em> acquire its silent <em>h</em>? Will cyberspace kill the one in <em>rhubarb</em>? And was it really rocket scientists who invented spell-check? </p><p>In <em>Righting the Mother Tongue</em>, author David Wolman tells the cockamamie story of English spelling, by way of a wordly adventure from English battlefields to Google headquarters. Along the way, he joins spelling reformers picketing the national spelling bee, visits the town in Belgium--not England--where the first English books were printed, and takes a road trip with the boss at Merriam-Webster Inc. Wolman punctuates the journey with spelling wars waged by the likes of Samuel Johnson, Noah Webster, Theodore Roosevelt, and Andrew Carnegie.</p><p>Rich with history, pop culture, curiosity, and humor, <em>Righting the Mother Tongue</em> explores how English spelling came to be, traces efforts to mend the code, and imagines the shape of tomorrow's words.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"An engaging ramble through our orthographic thickets"--<em>Boston Globe</em><br><br>"Sprightly history that sensibly balances the merits of standardization against the forces for freedom."--<em>Kirkus Reviews</em><br><br>An intellectual travelogue across the centuries that also ranges geographically from the Litchfield haunts of Dr. Johnson, creator of the first great English dictionary, to the Silicon Valley home of Les Earnest, the progenitor of computerized spell-checking.--<em>Wall Street Journal</em><br><br>"A funny and fact-filled look at our astoundingly inconsistent written language, from Shakespeare to spell-check."--St. Petersburg Times<br><br>A lively, engaging look at the idiosyncratic derivations and permutations of spelling in the English language.--Seattle Post Intelligencer<br><br>The lively, informative book is full of evidence/cocktail party fodder proving that the English spelling system is a hopeless tangle of French, Dutch, Latin, German and much, much more and really makes no sense at all.--Portland Tribune<br>

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