Mark Forsyth | |
---|---|
Born | London, England | 2 April 1977
Occupation | Author |
Language | English |
Alma mater | Lincoln College, Oxford (1999) |
Notable works | The Etymologicon , The Horologicon , The Elements of Eloquence |
Mark Forsyth (born 2 April 1977) [1] [2] is a British writer of non-fiction who came to prominence with a series of books concerning the meaning and etymology of English words. [3]
He is the author of best-selling [4] books The Etymologicon , The Horologicon , and The Elements of Eloquence , as well as being known for his blog The Inky Fool. [5] [6] [7] [8] Forsyth's earlier work was based around the meaning of words and more specifically, obscure and out-of-use words. His first two books were featured on BBC Radio 4's series Book of the Week . [9] [10]
In June 2012, Forsyth gave a TEDX talk entitled "What’s a snollygoster? A short lesson in political speak". [11]
Forsyth attended Winchester College in Winchester, Hampshire, England [3] from 1990 to 1995. [8] He also studied English Language & Literature at Lincoln College, Oxford University from 1996 [12] [13] to 1999. [14]
As a self-described journalist, proofreader, ghostwriter and pedant, [15] Forsyth started a blog called the Inky Fool in 2009 [14] [16] [17] as a forum to share his love of words. His posts often involve an exploration of words; where they come from and how they relate to each other. [17] "Etymology is fun," Forsyth said in a Skepticality interview, "Some people talk about the true meaning. I just find it interesting and delightful and often just very, very funny. That's the main thing I love about etymology." [16]
The popularity of Inky Fool led to Forsyth's first book publishing deal [18] in 2011 with Icon Books. [14] [19] In The Etymologicon: A Circular Stroll Through the Hidden Connection of The English Language, Forsyth explains the meanings and derivations of well-known words and phrases, [18] and explores the strange connections between words [20] in a stream-of-consciousness fashion. [21] The book's title, originally called Point Blank Check Mate: The Inky Fool's Book of Word Association, [14] references the poet John Milton who purportedly invented the word "etymologicon" to describe a book containing etymologies. [14] The book's structure leads the reader to "unexpected coinages and devious linkages, sexy, learned and satisfyingly obscure." [22] It is, according to reviewer Karin Schimke, "a cursory run through history presented with a wry eye and a peculiar sense of humor." [21] Reviewer Robert McCrum wrote, "Not since Eats, Shoots & Leaves has a book about language...attracted so much attention in bookshops, running through successive reprints." [15] The Etymologicon was a Sunday Times No. 1 Bestseller in January 2012. [23]
While The Etymologicon falls into the category of edutainment, [17] the examples Forsyth includes in the book are well researched and supported by evidence. [24] His goal was to include as much scholarly information as "lightly" as possible. [14] Forsyth researches words and phrases as far back to their original sources as he can find. [24] "Often, the joy of the research," he said in a Chicago Tribune interview, "is finding examples of the original usages that have been lost for centuries. For example, humble pie used to be umble pie because the umbles were the innards of a deer (so it was the poor man's equivalent of venison pie). I actually found a recipe book from 1727 deep in the bowels of the British Library that gave instructions on how to make it. So I did. And it was delicious." [25]
In The Etymologicon, Forsyth cautions against what he calls "the danger of inductive reasoning" [16] when determining the commonality among diverse languages. Some patterns in language, he asserts, are mere coincidence and linguists meticulously document specific examples of word and sound changes to determine whether or not disparate languages are, indeed, connected. [16]
The Illustrated Etymologicon (Icon Books) won the Trade Illustrated award at The 2022 British Book Design and Production Awards (BBDPA) on 18th January 2023. [26]
The Horologicon: A Day's Jaunt Through the Lost Words of the English Language is Forsyth's second book and contains "weird words for familiar situations." [3] [27] Many of these words are no longer in use, such as snollygoster, durgeon and frumples. [18] To avoid having his list of words "form what is technically known as a dictionary," [18] Forsyth arranges The Horologicon or Book of Hours [28] according to the hours in a day: [17] [18] [28] [29] [30] from dawn, through breakfast, commuting, office life, shopping, going out drinking and stumbling home. [18] Forsyth believes some of these words should be revived: "Never mind the puzzled looks," he says, "just use them. Throw them into conversation as often as possible." [17] A reviewer in The Daily Telegraph wrote: "From ante-jentacular to snudge by way of quafftide and wamblecropt, at last you can say, with utter accuracy, exactly what you mean." [29]
The Wall Street Journal said the book “confirmed his aptitude for making a journey in the linguistic backwoods seem both leisurely and instructive.” [31]
The Elements of Eloquence: Secrets of the Perfect Turn of Phrase is Forsyth's third book. Described as a writer's tool-kit or recipe book, [32] The Elements of Eloquence outlines 38 rhetorical figures [33] (e.g., hyperbole, [32] epizeuxis, [34] catachresis [4] ) that, according to Forsyth, can be learned by almost anybody. [33] Forsyth uses examples from William Shakespeare, [33] Lord Byron, [34] Winston Churchill, [34] Lord Tennyson, [34] Lewis Carroll, [34] Quentin Tarantino, [34] John Lennon [34] [35] and Katy Perry [34] [35] to reveal "the secrets" behind memorable lines and phrases. [32] One reviewer wrote: "It's doubtful that if more people knew Forsyth's The Elements of Eloquence, the world would be a better place, but it would certainly sound a great deal better." [34]
A reviewer on Wall Street Journal said that Forsyth “is adept at adding spice to received wisdom and popularizing the findings of academic linguists.” [36]
Forsyth's essay Unknown Unknown: Bookshops and the Delight of Not Getting What You Wanted was a special commission for Independent Booksellers Week. [37] [38] and celebrates the discoveries one can make at independent bookshops. [38] [39] In his essay, Forsyth makes the case for the lost pleasures of undirected browsing [40] that cannot be achieved with an internet search. [41] Reviewer Matthew Parris wrote:
A Christmas Cornucopia: The Hidden Stories Behind Our Yuletide Traditions was published on 3 November 2016.
A Short History of Drunkenness came out on 6 September 2018.
The book is a popular scientific description of the history of mankind's relationship with alcoholic beverages. The author begins with the Paleolithic period, and then examines the cultures of such countries and epochs as Sumer, ancient Egypt, the Aztec Empire, antiquity, the Middle Ages, the Muslim world, the Wild West, the Prohibition era, and Russia. The descriptions are accompanied by short excursions into history, anthropology, and sociology.
The New York Times Book Review called it an “entertaining bar-hop through the past 10,000 years.” [43]
Forsyth wrote the introduction for the new edition of Collins English Dictionary . [44] [45] In it, he notes "There are few pastimes in life as pleasurable and profitable as reading the dictionary. The plot is, of course, rather weak, and the moral of the whole thing slightly elusive; but for my money there isn't another book that comes close to it." [44] [45]
He also wrote a short chapter, "Who Named All the Cities," [46] for a book compiled by Gemma Elwin Harris called Big Questions from Little People Answered by Some Very Big People. [47]
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The Etymologicon: A Circular Stroll through the Hidden Connections of the English Language is a non-fiction book by English writer Mark Forsyth published in 2011. The book presents the surprising origin of everyday words used in English, with each definition being thematically linked to the next to provide a flowing narrative unlike reference books on etymology. The content of the book was derived from the author's blog, The Inky Fool.
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The Horologicon: A Day's Jaunt Through the Lost Words of the English Language, published in 2012, is a non-fiction book by Mark Forsyth.
The Elements of Eloquence: How to Turn the Perfect English Phrase is a non-fiction book by Mark Forsyth published in 2013. The book explains classical rhetoric, dedicating each chapter to a rhetorical figure with examples of its use, particularly in the works of William Shakespeare. Forsyth argues the power of Shakespeare's language was a result of studying formal rhetoric, and highlights their use through Shakespeare's development.