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The Professor and the Madman (US) / The Surgeon of Crowthorne (UK) by Simon Winchester
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The Professor and the Madman CD: A Tale of Murder, Insanity, and the…

by Simon Winchester

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5,03489363 (3.8)125
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HarperAudio (2005), Edition: Unabridged, Audio CD

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English (85)  Indonesian (2)  German (1)  Dutch (1)  All languages (89)
Showing 1-5 of 85 (next | show all)
Winchester is brilliant. He tells a story that is hard to believe and utterly fascinating. I have enjoyed all the Winchester books that I have read but this was the most interesting. ( )
  corrmorr | Sep 25, 2009 |
I thought this book was interesting, but I also thought it was a bit anti-climactic. After reading the synopsis, I think I expected it to be a bit more exciting and event driven than a book about the story of the making of a dictionary might ordinarily be expected to be. Still, I would recommend this to people who enjoy words and their history. ( )
  kherrington | Sep 5, 2009 |
The book was really interesting, and I enjoyed it a lot, even if there were a few Horrid Details in it that didn't have to be so well described! ( )
  anneofia | Sep 2, 2009 |
Is this a movie? If it isn't, it should be. They say that truth is stranger than fiction and I agree. Dr. W.C. Minor was a brilliant American doctor who was found legally insane after committing murder. During his confinement in a mental institute in London, Minor embarked on a quest to help Professor James Murray compile submissions for the Oxford English Dictionary. His astounding contribution led Professor Murray to seek out Dr. Minor, learn of his confinement in an asylum for the criminally insane, and despite all that, become the closest of friends.

The story itself appears benign. Dr. Minor's mental illness consists mostly of hallucinations and the paranoia that certain people were "messing with him." As a result nothing could prepare me for the moment when Dr. Minor decided on December 3rd, 1902 to cut off his own penis (a procedure called autopeotomy). "In his delusional world he felt he had no alternative but to remove it. He was a doctor, of course, and so knew roughly what he was doing" (p 193). What the ??? It's this tongue-in-cheek writing that makes The Professor and the Madman so much fun to read. ( )
  SeriousGrace | Aug 14, 2009 |
Showing 1-5 of 85 (next | show all)
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Series (with order)
Canonical Title
Original publication date
People/Characters
Important places
Important events
Awards and honors
Epigraph
Dedication
To the memory of G.M.
First words
Popular myth has it that one of the most remarkable conversations in modern literary history took place on a cool and misty late autumn in 1896, in the small village of Crowthrowne in the county of Berkshire.
Quotations
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
Disambiguation notice
aka `The Surgeon of Crowthorne`
Publisher's editors
Blurbers
Canonical titleThe Professor and the Madman (US) / The Surgeon of Crowthorne (UK)
Original publication date1998
People/CharactersW.C. Minor, James Murray
Important placesUK, Broadmoor Hospital, Crawthorne, Berkshire, England, Crawthorne, Berkshire, England
Important eventsAmerican Civil War
Awards and honorsNational Book Critics Circle Award finalist (General Nonfiction, 1998), New York Times bestseller (Nonfiction, 1998), Salon Book Award (Nonfiction, 1998)
DedicationTo the memory of G.M.
First wordsPopular myth has it that one of the most remarkable conversations in modern literary history took place on a cool and misty late autumn in 1896, in the small village of Crowthrowne in the county of Berkshire.
Last words(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
BlurbersSafire, William
Book description

Amazon.com Amazon.com Audiobook Review (ISBN 0060839783, Paperback)

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

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:52 -0400)

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