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Erin McKean

Author of The Secret Lives of Dresses

16+ Works 1,203 Members 30 Reviews

About the Author

Erin McKean is the founder of Wordnik.com. Previously, she was the editor in chief for American Dictionaries at Oxford University Press, and the editor of the New Oxford American Dictionary, 2E. Her non-fiction books include Weird and Wonderful Words, More Weird and Wonderful Words, Totally Weird show more and Wonderful Words, That's Amore, and The Hundred Dresses. Her first novel, The Secret Lives of Dresses, was published in 2011. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Includes the names: Erin McKean, Erin McKean

Image credit: Erin McKean. Photo by Pete Zivkov.

Works by Erin McKean

Associated Works

The New Oxford American Dictionary (2001) — Editor, some editions — 931 copies, 6 reviews

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Common Knowledge

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Reviews

33 reviews
This was a warm-hearted read for lovers of chick lit. While I found the main protagonist a bit weak and wishy-washy, I loved the secondary characters - Mimi (Dora's grandmother and the owner of the vintage dress shop), Gabby (Mimi's close friend) and Maux, who works in the shop. These three women were all slightly eccentric, but were also big-hearted and full of wisdom. The only parts I didn't like were the stories about the secret life of the dresses. Whilst I liked the premise, I found show more they interrupted the overall flow of the story. show less
What do your clothes say about you? What if they could tell stories of the times you actually wore them? Mine would probably say I am prone to spills and dress like a toddler. But a couple of pieces might tell of evenings out or exotic trips. Mostly though, my clothes wouldn't have terribly interesting stories to tell and no one would mistake them for things with fascinating histories. In The Secret Lives of Dresses though, the vintage dresses in Dora's grandmother Mimi's shop have tales to show more tell, tales imagined and written by Mimi to suit each dress.

Opening with Dora rushing home from college after her grandmother has suffered a stroke, this is a story of love and grief and finding oneself. Raised by her grandmother because her parents died when she was small, Dora is about to graduate from college, where she has drifted along without a plan. She intends to go to graduate school as much to make herself available to her cute boss at the school coffee shop (as a grad student, he won't date undergrads) as to postpone having to decide what she wants to do with her life when she grows up. Mimi's stroke changes everything. Dora goes home and takes over the vintage dress shop as a way of keeping busy while her grandmother is critical in the hospital. She discovers a real affinity for the shop, tied to it both by her love for her grandmother and by a gift for retail.

Through the shop, Dora meets Cal, a contractor renovating a condo upstairs who is wonderfully kind and understanding about the grief that Dora is feeling as her grandmother's health declines. She also finds a drawer full of secret lives for the dresses on the racks at the store, tales meant to go with the dresses when they are purchased. Never having known about Mimi's writing, she faces all the things that will remain unknown in her life, including anything much about her own parents, about whom Mimi didn't speak. The supporting characters here are quirky and fun, adding light and spunk to the story without taking the focus off of Dora and her journey of self-discovery.

McKean has a feather-light touch, only brushing the reader's emotions gently while still managing to convey the depth of Dora's feelings. The premise of the book is a charming one and plays out just as charmingly in practice. It was hard to not gobble the book down in one greedy sitting but instead to let it flow slowly and steadily. It is a thoroughly modern book but the detailed descriptions of the vintage dresses and their stories give the book a lovely old-fashioned tone in places. Despite the sadness, there's a warm feel of friendliness here. Over all, this is a delightful book and anyone captivated by the idea of dresses having histories will find a small gem in this tale. Characters, plot, setting, tone; it all comes together into a perfectly pleasing whole.
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Erin McKean’s collection of articles and essays from Verbatim is a fun expedition into linguistics and language history. McKean brings together writings from the periodical’s 37-year history. There’s almost too much here to do it justice. In the 56 presented essays, writers bounce ideas, trade barbs, and peel away the layers of words and ideas. Here’s some fun bits from this collection:

• An almost complete collection of derogatory Britishisms,
• A quick foray into the language of show more science fiction fan fiction
• A compendium of Japanese onomatopoeia
• An odd look at “tosspot” words—verb-noun combination words
• A fun history at the language of the so-called “Wicked” Bibles.

This book gives the reader digestible nuggets of writing on many of language’s vagaries. I’m a language nut, so I had a lot of fun with many of the entries, but it may be a bit like a a twelve-course meal when all you want is a nibble. Read this one in little chunks and you’ll learn a lot of new language trivia. An encyclopedic and fun volume.
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I shouldn’t start yet another book, with 30 plus books on my library card at present. But I’m very glad to have found this little romance. It is robust with lovely characters, quirky stories and entertaining dialogue. Maux, the Welding/HVAC student and vamp and her slam poet pompadoured Harvey. Wow!
It starts slow with drab Dora, but picks up once Dora reaches grandma Mimi’s dress shop. Yes, even the dresses have their own tales to tell.
The only detraction is that people were too show more characterized by their possession or absence of good taste in clothing.
Although this isn't great literature, it's at the top of it's own niche.
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½

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Works
16
Also by
2
Members
1,203
Popularity
#21,349
Rating
3.9
Reviews
30
ISBNs
37
Languages
4

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