The Dictionary of Lost Words by Pip Williams (2022) Random House
There are few
books that I label as important - this is one of them. The story follows
Esme, the daughter of a worker on the first edition of the Oxford English
Dictionary. As a child, she sits below her father’s desk and looks at the
word slips the fall from the tables. At one point she is sent to a
boarding school with disastrous effect on her life. She notices over time
that the words not included in the printed work are about women. She
becomes friends with a brother and sister in the suffrage movement. With
him, she bears a child, who is adopted by friends who move to Australia.
She starts collecting these lost words and eventually they become a book titled
Women’s Words and their Meanings. At the same time as this immense project
takes place, the world changes. War comes and with it is the loss of many
of the workers on the dictionary, including a compositor with whom she fell in
love. You will laugh at parts, be angry at others, and cry tears.
But you will read a very well written book and find it a satisfying read.
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