Arthur Schulman at New Dominion Bookshop Oct. 29

New Dominion Bookshop will host a reading and book-signing
by Arthur Schulman who will present selections from his new book,

Websterisms: A Collection of Words and Definitions Set Forth
by the Founding Father of American English

Wednesday, October 29 at 5:30 PM

What makes American English American? In 1800, irascible patriot Noah Webster set out to answer this question by tirelessly recording the vocabulary of a novel breed — the American citizen. Though he was a political conservative, his American Dictionary of the English Language was born out of his deeply held and profoundly democratic conviction that language was by and for the people. A word’s popularity, no matter how lowly its origins, was its criterion for inclusion. Webster’s original American dictionary, the granddaddy of them all, helped define the American character.

In a light-footed introductory essay, Harvard historian and New Yorker contributor Jill Lepore brilliantly revives the curmudgeonly Webster: his rigor, his passion for words, and his paradoxical ideas about language and politics. Arthur Schulman, longtime crossword puzzle creator for The New York Times, has culled fifteen hundred of Webster’s entries from the original book, revealing Webster’s interpretive powers as well as his pervasive moralism. Incisively annotated and delightfully illustrated with quotes from contemporary American sources, these excerpts paint a fascinating picture of a budding Republic.

For everyone who’s ever gone to “look it up in Webster’s,” Websterisms offers a crisp new view both of the man justifiably called the Founding Father of American English and of his magnum opus. It took Webster twenty-eight years to compile and publish his monumental work, during which time he was much mocked: what could American English be but a perversion of the King’s English? But his dictionary stuck, and its influence grew and grew. We still use most of the words Webster defined, like spank and caucus. Others, like musquash, haven’t fared as well. Websterisms tells the tale of a language that once was and that lives on.

Who reads a dictionary for pleasure? Websterisms will revise your prejudices. The introductory essay by the distinguished historian Jill Lepore entitled ‘A Nue Merrykin Dikshunary’ is an authoritative, highly amusing account of the crusty character who did the most to fix our American language. Equally engaging is the analysis of Webster’s crotchets by Arthur Schulman, a professor of psychology who is also a world-class lexiphile and maker of crossword puzzles, who has introduced, edited, and annotated the most interesting of the great man’s definitions. Highly recommended!
— E. D. Hirsch, author of Cultural Literacy

Websterisms is a carnival for language lovers. This entertaining and illuminating look at Webster and his eccentricities represents the best kind of scholarship: solid but never dull.
— Kitty Burns Florey, author of Sister Bernadette’s Barking Dog

Arthur Schulman is a retired cognitive psychologist and veteran crossword-puzzle constructor whose puzzles have appeared in The New York Times for many years. He is the owner of “dozens of dictionaries, including some important old ones; browsing these is always fun, and often revelatory.” Schulman taught in the psychology department at the University of Virginia for thirty-three years where he conducted many seminars on the mind of the puzzler. He is the author of “The Art of the Puzzler,” in Cognitive Ecology, edited by M. P. Friedman & E. C. Carterette (Academic Press 1996) and a contributor to The Believer magazine.

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