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3.0 

The Story of Ain't

By David Skinner
The Story of Ain't by David Skinner digital book - Fable

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Publisher Description

“It takes true brilliance to lift the arid tellings of lexicographic fussing into the readable realm of the thriller and the bodice-ripper….David Skinner has done precisely this, taking a fine story and honing it to popular perfection.”
—Simon Winchester, New York Times bestselling author of The Professor and the Madman

The Story of Ain’t by David Skinner is the captivating true chronicle of the creation of Merriam Webster’s Third New International Dictionary in 1961, the most controversial dictionary ever published. Skinner’s surprising and engaging, erudite and witty account will enthrall fans of Winchester’s The Professor and the Madman and The Meaning of Everything, and The Know-It-All by A.J. Jacobs, as it explores a culture in transition and the brilliant, colorful individuals behind it. The Story of Ain’t is a smart, often outrageous, and altogether remarkable tale of how egos, infighting, and controversy shaped one of America’s most authoritative language texts, sparking a furious language debate that the late, great author David Foster Wallace (Infinite Jest) once called “the Fort Sumter of the Usage Wars.” 

1 Review

3.0
“I have used, from time to time, the contraction ‘ain’t’ which is at the forefront (somewhat) of this particular book, and an affront to my wife’s grammatical taste. My ancestors are from the hollers of eastern Kentucky and so my backsliding into the vernacular is inherited honestly. Truth is, I do not find the word distasteful. It fills a certain hollow spot when one is looking to express oneself in a certain manner. Lest this become one of those ‘recipe’ reviews where a story must be told before getting to the ingredients list, I digress. You would think that in the heating up of the Cold War, the onset of the Vietnam War, and the turmoil of racial segregation would have kept people busy enough to not get bogged down in the revising of a dictionary. Apparently, you’d be wrong. It seems that a lot of folks had an opinion on the editorial stylings for Webster’s Third International, the use of language in America, and the existence of ain’t. There was a lot of ‘If Webster’s Second was good enough for my granddaddy...’ and even more ‘Webster’s Third signals the downfall of American language, culture, and possibly the nation.’ A lot of which was posited even by folks who had never even cracked the spine, relying instead on the ‘expert’ testimony of people who pretended to the throne of maintaining order and values among linguistic anarchy. David Skinner has faithfully researched the creation of Webster’s Third and gives a pleasant accounting of the problems inherent in re-examining a dictionary that ‘has all the answers’ while heeding the marketability of a single volume tome. Unfortunately, in his efforts to make it entertaining (because let’s face it, the story of lexicographical editing is not page turning), he misses the mark. Discussions of board meetings and missives back and forth are not exactly the stuff of thrillers. Still, if you find yourself interested in the art of the dictionary, this is mildly interesting, if for no other reason than the kerfuffle that Webster’s Third created when it burst onto the scene.”

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