Are you a word person? A curiosity seeker? An explorer? Take a look at
these twenty-six extraordinary individuals for whom love of language is
an extreme sport.
Step right up and read the genuine stories of writers so intoxicated by
the shapes and sound of language that they collected, dissected, and
constructed verbal wonders of the most extraordinary kind.
Jean-Dominique Bauby wrote his memoirs by blinking his left eyelid,
unable to move the rest of his body. Frederic Cassidy was obsessed with
the language of place, and after posing hundreds of questions to folks
all over the United States, amassed (among other things) 176 words for
dust bunnies. Georges Perec wrote a novel without using the letter e
(so well that at least one reviewer didn't notice its absence), then
followed with a novella in which e was the only vowel. A love letter
to all those who love words, language, writing, writers, and stories,
Alphamaniacs is a stunningly illustrated collection of
mini-biographies about the most daring and peculiar of writers and their
audacious, courageous, temerarious way with words.