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OverviewA biography of the life of Henry Watson Fowler (1858-1933). It tells the story of his work on ""The King's English"", ""Modern English Usage"", the ""Concise"" and ""Pocket Oxford"" dictionaries, and his collaboration on some of these projects with his brother, Frank. The development of the Fowlers' books is described, from the struggles to achieve an acceptable style for the ""Concise"" and ""Pocket Oxford"" dictionaries, to the planning and preparation of ""Modern English Usage"". Against the descriptions of Fowler's work is set the story of a man whose career began as a schoolmaster, but who changed career to risk all by moving to London to begin a new life as a writer. Henry then moved to Guernsey, where all his books were written, and at the age of 50 married a nursing-home matron, Jessie Wills. The later chapters chronicle the elderly Henry's struggles with the authorities to be able to enlist during World War I and his adventures as a soldier in France. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jenny McMorrisPublisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.00cm , Height: 6.70cm , Length: 23.00cm Weight: 0.569kg ISBN: 9780198662549ISBN 10: 0198662548 Pages: 262 Publication Date: 01 September 2001 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of Contents"Fowler's Early Years; Fowler the schoolmaster; Life as a freelance writer; Life on Guernsey; Writing ""The King's English""; Working on the ""Concise Oxford Dictionary"", and his marriage; Publication of the ""Concise Oxford Dictionary""; Starting work on the ""Pocket Oxford Dictionary"" and ""A Dictionary of Modern English Usage""; The First World War and life at the Front; Letters from France and return to Guernsey; Pressing on with POD and MEU; Move to the British mainland and illness; Discussions with OUP of a further dictionary project; the death of his wife; Henry's last years."ReviewsA generous, sympathetic biography of a shy scholar (1858-1933) whose Modern English Usage (1926) earned him a prominent place in the pantheon of language mavens.... An amiable account of a gentle man whose greatest love was language. --Kirkus Reviews<br> McMorris illuminates not only Fowler's life but also his work and the difficulties and controversies that surrounded it...McMorris' well-researched book will appeal to the same audience...as Simon Winchester's Professor and the Madman. --Booklist<br> A generous, sympathetic biography of the shy scholar (1858-1933) whose Modern English Usage (1926) earned him a prominent place in the pantheon of language mavens. An archivist for Oxford English Dictionaries, McMorris admits that her task was sometimes frustrating: there is no archive of Fowler family papers, and no one remains alive to be interviewed. But she did locate a treasure chest of letters to and from Fowler in the files of Oxford Univ. Press (for whom he labored for nearly 30 years)-in addition to the many letters Fowler sent back to his wife while he was in France during WWI. And she employs both her assiduous scholarship and considerable imagination to fill in the many blanks. McMorris begins when Fowler, 21, is returning home to be with his dying father, a teacher of mathematics. Fowler was a bright young man who at an early age developed rigorous daily routines of running and swimming that he was to practice virtually his entire adult life. In 1886 he completed a degree at Oxford and then settled into a secondary-school teaching career, for which he did not display much aptitude. (McMorris unearths comments from former students who characterized Fowler as something of a cold but competent fish.) After nearly 20 years in the classroom, he moved to London to try to establish himself as a writer. In the spring of 1904, he and his beloved brother Frank approached Oxford Univ. Press about a new translation of Lucian, and thus began a long, productive association-with time off only for marriage (he was 50), WWI (he lied to recruiters, who accepted him for combat duty at age 56), family tragedies (a sister committed suicide), and personal illness (he took a few days off to have an eye removed). The text is most lively when McMorris delves into the animated correspondence between Fowler and his editors. An amiable account of a gentle man whose greatest love was language. (12 plates, not seen) (Kirkus Reviews) Author InformationJenny McMorris is the Archivist for the Oxford English Dictionaries at Oxford University Press. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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