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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Professor and the Madman
This book is an 'easy' read. However, it's content is not what one might expect! I found the book quite fascinating and, at the same time learned a lot, amongst other important issues, about American history during the civil war.
The two main characters definitely left a lasting legacy! Who would have thought that, the creation of the Oxford Dictionary would involve...
Published 20 months ago by Louise

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Quick read for philologists, historians, and others.
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...

Published on July 3 2004 by William Franklin Jr.


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5.0 out of 5 stars nice review, but seems to me you could have helped, Sep 12 1998
By A Customer
The book seems fascinating. I think I will buy it and read it. Too bad the previous reviewer did not see fit to help the writer write a more complete book. hope it wasn't a case of sour grapes.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Starts disappointingly, becomes satisfying as it progresses, Sep 12 1998
By A Customer
At first , the book simplistically dramatises the minutae of the story ("the horses hooves struck sparks from the damp cobbles"-maybe they did!) Half-way through the book, when real material that the author obviously savours is reached the book becomes very enjoyable. I find it amazing that the same book published in England with the dignified and appropriate title, "THE SURGEON OF CROWTHORN" needed to be re-titled "THE MADMAN AND THE PROFESSOR" for US release. What does that say about (the publisher's presumptions of) the relative sophistication of the two reading populations.? The references and the author's explanation of how he came to write the book are very worthwhile. A shame that he dressed up the early chapters with weak fabrications of detail and over-long melodramatisation in a formulaic attempt to widen the book's appeal.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A charming, entertaining footnote to scholarly history, Sep 9 1998
By 
Thomas Beck (Cranbury, NJ United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Simon Winchester's The Professor and the Madman: A Tale of Murder, Insanity, and the Making of the Oxford English Dictionary is a charming and fascinating sidebar to one of the great works of scholarship in history. The Oxford English Dictionary took over 70 years to produce its first edition, and remains the definitive text on the historical development of the English language. It could not have been published without the unpaid efforts of over 800 dedicated volunteers - including Dr. William Minor, an American Army surgeon, incarcerated for almost 40 years in an English insane asylum for murdering a London brewery worker during an attack of a delusional paranoia that afflicted him his entire life.

The Professor and the Madman focuses on Minor's contribution to the work of Sir James Murray, the Scots genius who was the OED's first and greatest editor. Minor, when he wasn't being delusional, was a brilliant, assiduous reader, devoted to the English language and delighted to be part of the enormous project.

Winchester's book is a very quick read, and a delightful one. There are better books on Murray and the OED; but The Professor and the Madman gives a unique human insight into the enterprise, and the love of a language that inspired two such disparate individuals.

Anyone who loves to read and write will rightfully revere the OED and what it represents; also the enormous labors that went into its compilation. The Professor and the Madman is but a footnote to the history of that effort; but it is a lovely little footnote.

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5.0 out of 5 stars An entrancing, literate little book about two lexocographers, Sep 7 1998
By 
Frederick Hecht "Ted" (Scottsdale, AZ, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This true tale of two lexicographers (and friends) is a most engaging story. Contrary to what one critic has termed a "spare" style,author Simon Winchester's prose is elegant.
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3.0 out of 5 stars There is some significant information that Winchester missed, July 13 1998
By A Customer
The subject of "The Professor and the Madman," by Simon Winchester is the collaboration of Sir James A. H. Murray, editor of the "Oxford English Dictionary," and Dr. William C. Minor, the American volunteer who worked on the "O.E.D." for 20 years while an inmate in the Broadmoor Lunatic Asylum for the criminally insane.

I am a New York playwright who, in 1995, completed a full-length drama focusing on James Murray and William Minor, called "The Dictionary," and whose help Mr. Winchester sought when he was first considering writing his book. (Winchester mentions me in his Acknowledgments. He made a strenuous effort to enlist my help and, when I declined, offered to buy my research, which I also turned down.)

Ultimately, Winchester was able to get to almost all of the sources that I had used, as well as a number that I could never have reached. Nonetheless, there is some significant information that Winchester missed in his ! ! book, as well as a number of inaccuracies in "The Professor and the Madman."

About Minor's death Winchester writes, incorrectly, "There were no obituaries." An obituary was published in 1921 in "Yale University Obituary Record of Graduates Deceased During the Year Ending July 1, 1920." From this obituary one learns that Minor was born in the East Indies; that he entered the Yale School of Medicine in 1861 and was graduated in 1863; that he was incarcerated at Broadmoor, transferred to St. Elizabeth's in the U.S., and later transferred from St. Elizabeth's to The Retreat, in Hartford, where he died on March 26, 1920. The Yale obituary also mentions his brother Alfred.

Winchester refers to the lawyer who defended Minor in his murder trial, but does not mention the lawyer's name. My research suggests that the person who defended Minor is the same one who defended Oscar Wilde. The man's name is Edward Clarke. I am surprised that Winchester d! ! id not seize upon this possibility.

Winchester theorizes ! that Minor's clinically paranoid dread of the Irish, and of the Fenians in particular, was the result of his experience as a Union Army Surgeon with Irish troops during the Civil War.

Winchester neglects the fact that during the years that Minor was stationed in New York (on Governors Island) the Fenians were, in fact, his real enemy. Minor lived in New York during 1867 and 1868, when the local papers frequently covered events pertaining to the revolutionary movement in Ireland and to activities of the Irish in New York. In March of 1867 the Irish cause held the front page of just about every newspaper every day. It was during the week of March 18 that the expectation of a Fenian attack on Canada, still part of the British Empire at that time, appeared in at least three separate articles in three different papers. News of U. S. troops being moved from New York to the border to thwart the offensive also made headlines. That Minor would have been selected to assist in the ! ! battlefield action against the Fenians is not unlikely.

This attack never took place; however, less than a year before, the Fenians had staged an assault on Canada from New York State. Eight hundred Irishmen crossed the Niagara River and captured Fort Erie. They were subsequently defeated by U.S. troops, and about 700 Fenians were arrested. Minor would have known of this.

Winchester mentions the American vice-consul-general and quotes a letter of his to the Medical Superintendent of Broadmoor, but neglects to cite his name, which is Joshua Nunn. Winchester also failed to locate a series of twenty-two letters by Joshua Nunn, an important source of information regarding Minor. The letters to Minor's family and friends in America contain particulars that conflict with some of Winchester's assumptions regarding Minor's life at Broadmoor and his relations with his family.

Joshua Nunn clearly went beyond the call of duty in his assistance to, and profound concern for, Min! ! or. Nunn was the man who handled all the details of Minor'! s legal situation as well as Minor's living conditions at Broadmoor. He was also very involved in the press accounts. Nunn not only corresponded and met with Minor and his family but also visited Minor at Broadmoor.

According to the Nunn letters, the family did not want Minor returned to an asylum in the U.S. They were satisfied to let him remain at Broadmoor. This information contradicts Winchester's indication that the family would have rejoiced at Minor's return. Nunn was surprised at the family's neglect of Minor and at their refusal, at one point, to send Minor any more money at Broadmoor.

Nunn makes very clear that Minor's mail was heavily censored. This conflicts with Winchester's implication.

Winchester makes a mystifying observation at the end of his book. He states that it was only at the completion of the "Oxford English Dictionary," in 1927, that Americans could say that the Dictionary "was now, at least partly, of their own making."! ! ; From the very beginning Americans had the right to claim that the Dictionary was, to a significant extent, a creation of their own making. In Murray's first years of editing the "O.E.D.," fully one half of the 800 volunteer readers with whom he worked were American. James Murray felt that his most avid support came from the United States. He said, "...it is Americans upon whom I depend above all." He called Americans "the most reliable and trustworthy volunteers." In 1883 Murray wrote, "I truly believe that the future of English scholarship lies in the United States, where the language is studied with an enthusiasm unknown here and which will soon leave us far behind."

"The Professor and the Madman" focuses on some of the same fascinating aspects of the collaboration of Murray and Minor that first inspired me to dramatize the story. It is important, however, to look beyond the surface of material Winchester presents as! ! truth.

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