Picture of author.

About the Author

Martin H. Manser lives in England.
Image credit: via Tyndale House

Works by Martin H. Manser

Illustrated Family Bible Stories (1999) 403 copies, 1 review
I Never Knew That Was in the Bible (A to Z Series) (1999) — Author — 214 copies
The Ultimate Bible Fact & Quiz Book (2001) 174 copies, 1 review
Bloomsbury Good Word Guide (1988) 153 copies
The Wordsworth Dictionary of Eponyms (1988) 92 copies, 1 review
Dictionary of Bible Themes (1996) 82 copies, 1 review
Zondervan Dictionary of Bible Themes (1999) 64 copies, 1 review
King James Bible Word Book (2002) 32 copies
The Guinness Book of Words (1988) 31 copies
The Chambers Thesaurus (1997) 30 copies, 1 review
First Dictionary (2000) 22 copies
Pocket Thesaurus of English Words (1979) 20 copies, 1 review
The Quotable Bible (2001) 19 copies
Daily Guidance (1988) 16 copies
A Treasury of Psalms (2003) 13 copies
My Day-by-Day Prayers (2019) 8 copies
Guide to Better English (1994) 8 copies
Great Big Quiz Book (2000) 8 copies
Open Your Bible (2011) 7 copies
My Day-by-Day Praises (2019) 6 copies
Chambers Bible Quotations (1989) 6 copies
Walking with God (2005) 4 copies
The Joy of Christmas (2003) 3 copies
English Idioms Dictionary (2012) 3 copies
Closer Walk with God (1987) 3 copies
Meetings (2020) 2 copies
Bibelhistorier (2002) 1 copy
Sunum Sirlari (2014) 1 copy
Encounters with Jesus (2011) 1 copy
Crossword Companion (2014) 1 copy
Guide to Style (2007) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Penguin Concise Thesaurus (2000) — Editor, some editions — 21 copies

Tagged

Bible (80) Bible Reference (29) Bible Stories (16) Bible Study (13) children (12) China (13) Chinese (70) Chinese language (24) Christian (24) Christianity (21) dictionaries (25) dictionary (160) ebook (13) English (76) English language (36) eponyms (12) grammar (17) language (112) languages (15) linguistics (10) Logos (38) non-fiction (107) prayer (11) quotations (36) reference (252) religion (34) thesaurus (14) to-read (31) words (14) writing (46)

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1952
Gender
male
Education
University of York
University of Regensburg
Occupations
editor
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
Bromley, Kent, England, UK
Associated Place (for map)
England, UK

Members

Reviews

15 reviews
I can't say enough good things about this excellent family bible. Each page is a self-contained story (long accounts like the Exodus are told in several successive stories), in language that is clear to children, yet true to the original. Each story is accompanied by an illustration, and most compelling, a sidebar of historical information. That historical information, the maps which are included, and the clear format, make it an excellent teaching tool, and a great way to interest children show more in the bible (for example, the page on Moses' discovery among the reeds points out that crocodiles were common in the Nile, and that leaving a baby there was a very risky thing to do.) A great, and informative, volume. (Melissa Trafton) show less
A collection of word lists and factoids (a la Schott's Miscellany) about words, rather than essays or in depth discussions about the history or origins of the English language. So from that point of view the title is a bit misleading – more like “The Secret Affiliations of English Words”.

Unfortunately it's not always correct – the sections on regional coinages (why is it that so many books that discuss Australian slang get it wrong??) and peculiar proverbs, for example. Or the claim show more that Nelson's last words were “Kiss me Hardy / Kismet Hardy”. (Pretty thoroughly debunked by now!) Sometimes it feels as though the author has just pulled the ‘meaning’ out of the air, or had a wild guess and decided that it's close enough. And this strange lack of thoroughness crops up in other places too – in the section on homophones, for example, we get rain and reign, but not rein; so and sew, but not sow; and their and there, but not they're. Or the fact that we're told that ‘cleave’ is “the only word with two synonyms with opposite meanings” early on in the book, only to find a it (and nineteen others) in a list of ‘Janus words’ (defined as “words with contradictory meanings”) towards the end …

Having said that, it is an enjoyable volume, set out in an interesting way. Just don't rely on it if you ever need to phone a friend on Who Wants To Be A Millionaire …
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½
I have 3 thesauruses and this is always the first port of call which can solve 99% of my queries of it - it is so used it's falling to pieces, but I wouldn't part with it except one day to buy a newer copy. The lists at the back of themes & items and suffixes & prefixes, are particularly useful.
Martin Manser’s book should be bought in bulk because it is completely irresistible.

Subtitled The Secret Life of the English Language, this is a book of lists and language factoids, invaluable for reference or for the sheer pleasure of it.

Lists of famous pseudonyms include Mrs Daryl Walters: almost all of us have read some of her books — she was so popular at one stage that public libraries threatened to remove her from their shelves — but who actually knew Enid Blyton’s real name? show more Greek is the oldest living alphabet; and goddessship is the only word with a triple letter. This is a book to treasure. show less

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Statistics

Works
151
Also by
1
Members
3,242
Popularity
#7,883
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
14
ISBNs
316
Languages
7

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