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Wordcatcher
- An Odyssey into the World of Weird and Wonderful Words
- Narrated by: Jack Chekijian
- Length: 7 hrs and 13 mins
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Summary
Who knew that the great country of Canada is named for a mistake? How about "bedswerver", the best Elizabethan insult to hurl at a cheating boyfriend?
By exploring the delightful back stories of the 250 words in Wordcatcher, listeners will be lured by language and entangled in etymologies. Author Phil Cousineau takes us on a tour into the obscure territory of word origins with great erudition and endearing curiosity.
The English poet W. H. Auden was once asked to teach a poetry class, and when 200 students applied to study with him, he only had room for 20 of them. When asked how he chose his students, he said he picked the ones who actually loved words. So too, with this book - it takes a special wordcatcher to create a treasure chest of remarkable words and their origins, and any word lover will relish the stories that Cousineau has discovered.
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- A
- 08-09-20
Awful narration
I had to stop listening. The content may have been ok but the narration sounded like it was read by a machine. This is a book about words and an opportunity to squeeze the juice from mellifluous words that the narrator let pass. Worse than lay was the lack of pause. Essentially it was reading a dictionary aloud but each new word was introduced without pause or change of tone as if it was the start of a new sentence rather than paragraph. The onslaught of words at a regular bullet like pace meant there was no room to savour the meaning let alone gather the topic had changed. It was possibly a very good book ruined by the way it was read aloud.
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