Mark Forsyth is a writer, journalist and blogger. Every job he's ever had, whether as a ghost-writer or proof-reader or copy-writer, has been to do with words. He started The Inky Fool blog in 2009 and now writes a post almost every day. The blog has received worldwide attention and enjoys an average of 4,000 hits per week.
[Forsyth] riff[s] very entertainingly on the hidden connections of
words (from brackets and codpieces, to cappuccinos and
monkeys).
*Robert McCrum, The Guardian*
I'm hooked on Forsyth's book - Crikey, but this is addictive.
*Mathew Parris, The Times*
Kudos should go to Mark Forsyth, author of The Etymologicon -
Clearly a man who knows his onions, Mr Forsyth must have worked 19
to the dozen, spotting red herrings and unravelling inkhorn terms,
to bestow this boon - a work of the first water, to coin a
phrase.
*The Daily Telegraph*
This year's must-have stocking filler - the angel on the top of the
tree, the satsuma in the sock, the threepenny bit in the plum
pudding, the essential addition to the library in the smallest room
is Mark Forsyth's The Etymologicon.
*Ian Sansom, The Guardian*
The stocking filler of the season.
*Robert McCrum, The Observer*
Witty and erudite ... stuffed with the kind of arcane information
that nobody strictly needs to know, but which is a pleasure to
learn nonetheless.
*Nick Duerden, Independent*
This witty book liberates etymology from the dusty pages of the
dictionary and brings it alive.
*Good Book Guide*
'The Etymologicon' contains fascinating facts
*Daily Mail*
From Nazis and film buffs to heckling and humble pie, the obscure
origins of commonly-used words and phrases are explained.
*Daily Telegraph*
A collection of verbal curiosities ... fascinating.
*Spectator*
A perfect bit of stocking filler for the bookish member of the
family, or just a cracking all-year-round read. Highly
recommended.
*Spectator*
Light, entertaining and fascinating ... This is really one of those
books where you have to fight hard to resist telling anyone in
earshot little snippets every five minutes.
*Brian Clegg*
An absolute gem ... a pleasure to read.
*Books Monthly*
I want this book to be never-ending ... a real winner.
*Books Monthly*
It makes for a very good read ... a perfect Christmas gift for
anyone who might be interested in where our words come from.
*A Common Reader*
I adored this book. I read and read and then I read some more until
it was all gone. It was just my cup of tea, well presented,
engaging, witty, wonderful. Full of usable facts and great
anecdotes, it's one of the only 'history' books I've read this year
that was anything other than dull as dishwater. Full marks.
*The Bookbag*
Mark Forsyth, who blogs as 'The Inky Fool,' is an extreme and
hugely entertaining practitioner.
*Financial Times*
The subtitle ... 'A Circular Stroll Through the Hidden Connections
of the English Language' ... is a misdescription. It is not a
stroll; it is a plunge on a toboggan where the only way to stop is
to fall off.
*Financial Times*
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