A journey through the exotic world of Merriam-Webster, dictionaries, and language, at a time of rapid-fire change in the way we create, consume, define, and use words.
One of the ideas that comes across in Stefan Fatsis’s Unabridged, a warm, personal paean to Merriam-Webster and its staffers, is how oddly this fast, witty public engagement sits with the traditional bread-and-butter work of maintaining the archive of the language as it has been used by Americans over the centuries ... The real pleasure of Unabridged lies in its descriptions of the scrupulous deliberations of Merriam’s lexicographers as they weigh the sense of words, waiting patiently—sometimes for years—to see whether a neologism is a flash-in-the-pan or something that will endure ... A century ago, T.S. Eliot wondered, 'Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?' For all its enjoyable humor, Fatsis’s elegiac book circles around the same question. There is, after all, artificial intelligence, and there is actual intelligence.
Engaging ... Fatsis provides an excellent primer on Merriam-Webster’s role in the culture wars ... Fatsis’ history is charmingly told, even if his miscellaneous approach means the book sometimes loses its center. Its best passages deal with Merriam office life.
Gems aplenty ... Fatsis has his own gift for the sardonic ... Abounds with curious particulars and zesty turns of phrase. More importantly, Unabridged is a stout defense of the craft of making dictionaries.