"Every time you look up a word in an English dictionary, you unwittingly pay homage to an unsung, half-forgotten Rutland schoolmaster who in 1604 came up with the brilliant idea of an alphabetical dictionary. Previously, no-one had imagined what today seems so blindingly obvious, that a dictionary should run seamlessly, from A to Z. This brave little book is the first attempt to make a readable inventory of the most interesting English words four centuries ago. It is difficult to overemphasize its importance to the English language."—Simon Winchester
(Simon Winchester 20061205)
"It is magicke, inchaunting, and makyth me to maffle and bleate. A fulgent thing, deserving of great claritude."—Stephen Fry
(Stephen Fry 20070304)
"This book is back in print after vanishing for almost four centuries. It is a dictionary, but you won''t want to look anything up in it. Instead, you will want to read it straight through, like an adventure tale—where the hero is our own young language, as it begins to pull itself up by the bootstraps. One word after another amuses you, bewilders you, and astonishes you. Best of all, the dictionary comes with another story behind the scenes, elegantly revealed for us by John Simpson: how a defrocked priest, living in remote rural England, continually in trouble with church authorities, came to devote himself to the creation of this strange and wonderful book."—James Gleick, author of Issac Newton and Chaos
(James Gleick 20070404)
"Apart from its importance to the history of lexicography, this pioneering reference work remains interesting as an early effort to strike a balance between innovation and accessibility in language use."—Scott McLemee, Inside Higher Ed
(Scott McLemee
Inside Higher Ed 20070726)
"Cawdrey''s text, which has more than 2,500 words with brief and sometimes quirky definitions, is now available after being out of print for 350 years. . . . Enlightening and entertaining introduction."--Philadelphia Inquirer
(Katie Haegele
Philadelphia Inquirer 20070708)
"Wordsmiths, your ship has come in: A new book—well, sort of new—should keep you pleasantly perusing till dawn. . . . Few books are as delightful as this compendium, thought to be the first alphabetical dictionary."—Julia Keller, Chicago Tribune
(Julia Keller
Chicago Tribune 20070501)
"The Bodleian Library has done wordsmiths and scholars of the language a great service by faithfully reprinting the text, with a lengthy and useful introduction by John Simpon, chief editor of The Oxford English Dictionary. This slim little tome should once again find a place in all the libraries of the realm, even if now its significance is more historical than referential."—Michael G. Cornelius, Bloomsbury Review
(Michael G. Cornelius
Bloomsbury Review 20070822)
"Quaint, but pioneering, work. . . . Mr. Simpson, who is chief editor of ''The Oxford English Dictionary,'' provides a wonderful introduction to this curious compiliation, together with a facsimile of the original title page. . . . This is a gnarled, rude, fierce old dictionary and utterly without ''calliditie'' (''craftiness, or deceit''). It may not provide much ''clavicorde'' (''mirth'') and it certainly ''maffles'' (''stammers''), but it also ''inchaunts'' (''bewitches''). It shows the raw stuff out of which Shakespeare and Cawdrey''s other contemporaries of genius fashioned their more sublime flights. In his Puritan soul, Cawdrey would have considered these mere ''blatterings'' (''vaine babblings''), but his rough alphabet formed the bedrock on which they rode."—New York Sun
(Eric Ormesby
New York Sun )