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The Professor and the Madman: A Tale of Murder, Insanity, and the Making of the Oxford English Dictionary
 
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The Professor and the Madman: A Tale of Murder, Insanity, and the Making of the Oxford English Dictionary (Paperback)

by Simon Winchester (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (350 customer reviews)

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Amazon.com Audiobook Review

The compilation of the Oxford English Dictionary, 70 years in the making, was an intellectually heroic feat with a twist worthy of the greatest mystery fiction: one of its most valuable contributors was a criminally insane American physician, locked up in an English asylum for murder. British stage actor Simon Jones leads us through this uncommon meeting of minds (the other belonging to self-educated dictionary editor James Murray) at full gallop. Ultimately, it's hard to say which is more remarkable: the facts of this amazingly well-researched story, or the sound of author Simon Winchester's erudite prose. Jones's reading smoothly transports listeners to the 19th century, reminding us why so many brilliant people obsessively set out to catalogue the English language. This unabridged version contains an interview between Winchester and John Simpson, editor of the Oxford dictionary. (Running time: 6.5 hours, 6 cassettes) --Lou Schuler --This text refers to the Audio Cassette edition.


Books in Canada

Like Krakatoa: The Day the World Exploded (2003)-an account of the volcanic eruption of 1883 and its geological, political, artistic and religious reverberations in the present day-Simon Winchester’s earlier success The Professor and the Madman (1999) might be described as a book on subterranean forces. Even though the human scale and its tale of small individual endeavours is dwarfed by seismic shifts, rifts and the greatest explosion in recorded human history, there is perhaps something more compelling about the smaller intimacies of this earlier story.
Set in the late 1900s, The Professor and the Madman, according to the blurb, is a ‘literary history’ on the false starts, interruptions and some seventy years it took to make the Oxford English Dictionary (OED). Yet it might more accurately be described as an interweaving of biographies and fantasies. For it is a revelation of the lives of James Murry, general editor of the OED, Dr. W.C. Minor, one of its major contributors, and words themselves.
Born in 1837, Murry was a poor, self-educated Scot and a member of the Congregationalist Church. As a child he seems to have been a kind of Hardyesque Jude figure. He was a voracious learner, taking an interest in maps, archaeology and astronomy. But it was his appetite for language that led him out of teaching and into his role as the general editor of the ‘big dictionary’, at Oxford. It was there he set up his ‘Scriptorium’ and with ‘military efficiency’ and a sense of ‘monkish asceticism’ set about the task. From there, Murry enlisted the help of thousands of volunteers and one of the most prolific and exacting contributors was William Chester Minor.
Like Murry, Minor was from a pious Congregationalist background. But his upbringing was altogether more exotic. Born on the tropical island of Ceylon, in 1834, the “Minors were first-line American aristocracy.” When he was thirteen William was sent back to the United States to be given a formal education, before beginning his studies at Yale Medical School in 1861. Shortly after graduation he joined The Union Army, just four days before the Battle of Gettysburg. Confronted with horrific injuries, and though a gifted surgeon, the medicine he practised could only fumble in the wounds of casualities. And it must have gone against the very core of his being when, at one point, he was ordered to punish an Irish deserter by branding his face with the letter D.
Exposure to such brutality seems to have irrevocably disturbed Minor, leading to his discharge from the army and eventual hospitalisation. As one of the “walking wounded” he travelled to England to try to recover his former self, like a kind of latter-day Hamlet. He took lodgings in the Lambeth part of Dickensian London and it was there he shot and killed George Merrett (to whom Winchester dedicates his book) believing him to be a Fenian who was planning to kill him. Convicted of murder, Minor was treated sympathetically and sent to Broadmoor Asylum for the Criminally Insane in Crowthorne. He brought with him all his books, easel, paints and flute and it was there, in his prison cell, that he began to contribute to the dictionary. And the first word he researched was Art.
Words are, of course, the other protagonists. As Winchester rightly suggests, a dictionary should “give the life story of each word”; it should”offer its biography” and record the register of its birth. To think of words as having a biography gives them a life and slipperiness that the authoritative language of etymology and lexicography seems to conceal. And one delightful aspect of this book is the way words, such as “murder”, “polymath”, “sesquipedalian” and “diagnosis” are defined at the beginning of each chapter, telling us something about its theme and the progression of the story. There are wonderful asides as well, such as Samuel Johnson’s charmingly eccentric and redundant definition of an elephant as being “The largest of all quadrupeds” who is “equipped with a trunk,” which, in turn, indicate why a dictionary was needed to modernise, simplify and standardise words, their spelling and their meaning. This was a mammoth task. And through the thousands of entries that Minor sent Murry they came to know one another. Before their first meeting, Murry had imagined that Minor was a medical man of literary tastes who had retired to the country to pursue his interest in books and language. He was astonished to learn of the American’s circumstances, yet nonetheless sympathetic and he continued to visit him over twenty years.
Like biography, fantasies are as much about what has been said as what has been left out. And Winchester’s tale is, in part, about the fantasies of an age and of an individual. There is the Victorian fantasy that a dictionary could fix the language, that it was a monumental work of complete authority and not an endless effort that attempts to keep apace with the evolution of words and their meanings. And then there are Minor’s perverse sexual imaginings and paranoid fear of the Irish. It is instructive, at this point, to refer to a moment in W. B Yeats’s Autobiographies, when he remembers his own childish and dreamy wish to die fighting the Fenians. This is not to suggest that Yeats should be our picture of mental health, but the shape the Irish poet put upon his own fantasies serves to highlight how Minor was governed by the limited repertoire of his own imaginings. In other words, Yeats was free to invent in a way that Minor was not.
Winchester’s accounts of Minor’s misery are clearly sympathetic. His madness is not glamorised, as so many accounts of madness are. And this book, in effect, gives us a case-history, charting Minor’s first sexual lustings as a young boy in Ceylon, his later fear that he would be murdered by Fenians, to his belief that he was being molested in his cell by men, and ultimately to his act of self-mutilation when he cut off his penis. Although the progress of the dictionary and Minor’s insanity makes for a compelling read, at times, Winchester’s style can be portentous. For instance, the first chapter, “The Dead of Night in Lambeth Marsh”, it might be said, owes less to the Dickensian prose that opens Great Expectations and perhaps more to what the Victorians called “penny dreadfuls”. He is perhaps too defensive about the OED project itself and should have been more inclusive, outlining the arguments of those academics that see the work as sexist, racist, fussy and imperial. For these shortcomings do not necessarily diminish the dictionary, but instead are reminders to each generation of the organic nature of such work-that it continually needs updating, that it is not monumental but fluid. There are some omissions. For instance, Minor’s barrister may have been Edward Clarke, who defended Oscar Wilde, which seems to be a coincidence full of possibility. Also, Winchester hints at, when he really should have engaged with, the homo-erotic qualities of Minor’s fantasies. And I would have liked Winchester to develop further his claim that “doing all those dictionary slips was [Minor’s] medication; in a way they became his therapy” and to explore what it might have meant for him to be researching the ‘biography’ of words rather than rehearsing his own fantasies. Yet, despite such criticism, the most engaging moments in The Professor and the Madman occur when Winchester moves beyond a well represented account and gets caught up in the momentum and risk of oversight, speculation and inventiveness.
Michael Kinsella (Books in Canada)

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350 Reviews
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3.8 out of 5 stars (350 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Quick read for philologists, historians, and others., Jul 3 2004
By William Franklin Jr. (Houston, Texas, United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I like reading the occasional historical fact (rather than historical fiction) "novelette," and The Professor and the Madman was definitely easy to get through. One can learn much from books like this, particularly the way normal people lived their day-to-day lives in a certain time and place.

A few things I liked about this book:

1. One will assuredly learn a thing or two about the English language, in reading it. You will learn some obsolete words, the origin of some words, and just get a refresher of other, more common words. Each chapter begins with a dictionary entry of a particular word, some very normal words, some more exotic words.

2. The parallel lives of the two main characters are interesting to follow. One feels real emotions for both. There are a few shocking moments in the book, which stand out quite a bit in front of the otherwise fairly tame narrative.

3. I grew up with the Oxford English Dictionary, and I always wondered how they compiled all the words. It was great learning about how they did that.

4. The book covers an array of themes and topics, and a fairly diverse geography. Mental illness, civil war, sexual propriety, crime and punishment, one can learn a little bit about a lot of issues in the reading of Simon Winchester's book.

I wouldn't recommend the book to just anyone, though. It can be kind of slow, and sometimes one simply grows tired of bouncing back and forth between the two main characters. It is also fairly short; one sort of wishes for more detail on certain events. In some places, the book reads like a crime/detective novel from the 19th century, in others it is more like a biography. It sort of skips around from one style to the next, almost as if different parts were written at very different times by an author in very different states of mind. Overall, though, this book is a nice, quick read, a good plot, and you will learn a thing or two from it.

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5.0 out of 5 stars The Genius Behind the Modern Dictionary, Jul 3 2008
By Ian Gordon Malcomson (Smithers, Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   

Here is another one of those great Winchester-style historical stories that proves that improbable ideas often happen when obsessively brilliant people come together on a mission to change the world around them. In this particular work, Simon Winchester, a prominent British biographer, provides a very colorful description of what one of those unlikely ideas was - the compilation of the modern Oxford dictionary - and who the cast of illustrious movers and shakers(the Group of 40) was that made it happen. Up until the mid-1800s, work on a comprehensive English dictionary had gone nowehere. It was either too big a task for the resources at hand or not lucrative enough to attract the big publishers of the day. This story is a compilation of the adventurous, the infamous, the heroic, and the downright bizarre. For this project to happen, certain factors had to make their presence felt: the sudden expansion of the English language through the rapid growth of the British Empire and the personal passion of gifted people to see it through. On this second score, how would anyone in their right mind ever conceive of a medical doctor(Minor) doing a life sentence at Bradmoor Asylum for murder linking up with a linguistics professor(Murray) to spearhead the development of the world's most exhaustive and authoritative lexicon. Of the two, it is Dr. Minor, the certified lunatic, who comes in for the most attention because his path to fame was definitely the one `least traveled'. The reader gets to follow this polymathic character through the life-changing horrors of the American Civil War, his subsquent vagabond travels around England, before his eventual run-in with the law in the back streets of London. It is only when he was locked up in a home for the mentally insane did his true academic brilliance surface. Minor was a surgeon who had a passion for saving lives but, also, as an amateur philologist, had a passion for the study of literature and language. This book shares a lot about how the original Oxford dictionary was technically contrived and why it comes to us today as one of the ultimate authorities on the origin and use of English as a global language. An all-round fine read.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Sensationalized Version of a Gripping History, Aug 13 2007
The Professor and the Madman is the yellow journalism version of the history of the Oxford English Dictionary (OED), Sir James Murray, Dr. William Chester Minor, the treatment of the criminally insane during the Victorian period. I was particularly offended by the overly graphic details of Dr. Minor's self-mutilation (if you don't have a strong stomach, skip that section) and playing up of the fictionalized (and often repeated as fact) version of how Sir James and Dr. Minor first met. If the story weren't so interesting, I would encourage you to avoid the book.

Writing the first edition of the OED took 70 years and employed an unusual organizational method that has since become popular for monumental knowledge tasks -- relying on volunteers to do the bulk of the work of finding quotations that use each word in different ways over time. As someone who has always admired the OED, I enjoyed learning more about the process involved in its development. Unfortunately, that material is scattered throughout the book rather than concentrated where you can find it for a brief read through. The examples are good, however, if the material is needlessly diluted.

Thinking about that monumental effort will give you just the right foundation for appreciating how mental illness can affect parts of one's faculties while leaving others undisturbed, as the paranoid Dr. Minor employed his extensive free time in the Broadmoor Asylum for Criminally Insane and personal wealth to become of the most organized and helpful contributors to the OED.

Dr. Minor's story is the actual focus of the book. Unless you are quite interested in ironies, mental illness, and how the Victorians treated the criminally insane, you will probably find this book has more of Dr. Minor than you really care to know. It's a tragic story, but not one that I would have sought to read if the OED development process material hadn't been in the book. As background for that comment, you should know that I have a strong interest in criminal insanity and wrote my law school thesis on the subject. The book tells its story to make you feel the pain of being Dr. Minor quite well, but The Madman and the Professor won't advance your knowledge of mental illness or legal concepts of responsibility very much.

I was attracted to this book in part due to my work in leading the 400 Year Project, seeking ways to make improvements in everyone's lives at 20 times the normal rate between 2015 and 2035. I came away impressed that just a few people can make a remarkable contribution to an all-but-impossible project. I will redouble my efforts to locate such people for the 400 Year Project.

Tackle the impossible to find out what you can really do!
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars When you think you read it all something new pops up.
The book is well balanced between the history of the OED and the life and times of Dr. William Minor, (a major contributor). Read more
Published on Aug 30 2006 by bernie

4.0 out of 5 stars interesting story
This is a marvelous book about the Professor, James Murray, the primary editor of the Oxford English Dictionary, and the Madman, Dr. William C. Read more
Published on Jul 10 2004 by James J. Lippard

5.0 out of 5 stars A Fascinating Footnote to History
Simon Winchester has written a very unusual book about a very strange series of events during the last century and the dawn of this one. Read more
Published on Jun 16 2004 by David W. Nicholas

4.0 out of 5 stars Fun and Accessible
Being a dictionary enthusiast, especially of the OED, I was excited to come across this book. It reads quickly, and has a wealth of factual information and also some fun... Read more
Published on May 25 2004 by John Smeltzer

5.0 out of 5 stars Triumph through tragedy
While the title and subtitle might grab one's attention, the fact that this book is about the compiling of the Oxford English Dictionary might seem like a dry topic. Read more
Published on April 17 2004 by R. Chaffey

5.0 out of 5 stars Rollicking history
Winchester has a marvellous knack of being able to bring to life rollicking stories from the past, which in other hands may appear dry and boring. Read more
Published on April 4 2004 by saliero

3.0 out of 5 stars slight but fascinating history
This is a fascinating, if slight, tale about one part of the massive Oxford English dictionary's creation. Read more
Published on Mar 23 2004 by D. H. Richards

4.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating Facet of History
The Professor and the Madman contains a small, fascinating facet of history. It explores the 70 year effort to create the Oxford English Dictionary, but focuses on the story of... Read more
Published on Mar 18 2004 by J. Vilches

3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting, but short for the money
In this rather short book, Simon Winchester writes about the creation of the Oxford English Dictionary, and specifically about two of the main forces behind it, Professor James... Read more
Published on Mar 17 2004 by Gary M. Greenbaum

2.0 out of 5 stars Uh, okay...
When I saw Simon Winchester's name on the cover, I expected great things. I'm still waiting...

When one picks up this book, one expects a story about the two men involved in the... Read more

Published on Mar 4 2004 by L. D. Widmer

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