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Gadsby (novel)

Gadsby is a 1939 novel by Ernest Vincent Wright, written without words that contain the letter E, the most common letter in English. A work that deliberately avoids certain letters is known as a lipogram. The plot revolves around the dying fictional city of Branton Hills, which is revitalized as a result of the efforts of protagonist John Gadsby and a youth organizer.

Gadsby
Front dust jacket of the 1939 first edition
AuthorErnest Vincent Wright
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreNovel, lipogram omitting the letter E
PublisherWetzel Publishing Co.
Publication date
1939
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages260 pp
OCLC57759048

Though vanity published and little noticed in its time, the book has since become a favorite of fans of constrained writing and is a sought-after rarity among some book collectors. The first edition carries on title page and cover the subtitle A Story of Over 50,000 Words Without Using the Letter "E" (with the variant 50,000 Word Novel Without the Letter "E" on the dust jacket), sometimes dropped from late reprints.

Despite Wright's claim, the work accidentally contains four uses of the letter "e": "the" three times and "officers" once.[1]

Lipogrammatic quality edit

In the introduction to the book (which, not being part of the story, does contain the letter 'e') Wright says his primary difficulty was avoiding the "-ed" suffix for past tense verbs. He made extensive use of verbs that do not take the -ed suffix and constructions with "do" and "did" (for instance "did walk" instead of "walked"). Scarcity of word options also drastically limited discussion involving quantity – Wright could not write about any number between six and thirty – pronouns, and many common words.[2]

An article in the linguistic periodical Word Ways said that 250 of the 500 most commonly used words in English were still available to Wright despite the omission of words with e.[3]

Wright uses abbreviations on occasion, but only if the full form is similarly lipogrammatic, e.g. "Dr." (Doctor) and "P.S." (postscript) would be allowed but not "Mr." (Mister).

Wright also turns famous sayings into lipograms. Instead of William Congreve's original line, "Music has charms to soothe a savage breast", Wright writes that music "hath charms to calm a wild bosom." John Keats' "a thing of beauty is a joy forever" becomes "a charming thing is a joy always".[4] In other respects, Wright does not avoid topics which would otherwise require the letter "e"; for example, a detailed description of a horse-drawn fire engine is made without using the words "horse", "fire", or "engine".

Plot and structure edit

John Gadsby, 50, is alarmed by the decline of his hometown, Branton Hills, and rallies the city's youth to form an "Organization of Youth" to build civic spirit and improve living standards. Gadsby and his youthful army, despite some opposition, transform Branton Hills from a stagnant municipality into a bustling, thriving city. Toward the book's conclusion, the members of Gadsby's organization receive diplomas in honor of their work. Gadsby becomes mayor and helps increase Branton Hills' population from 2,000 to 60,000.

The story starts around 1906 and continues through World War I, Prohibition, and President Warren G. Harding's administration. Gadsby is divided into two parts: the first, about a quarter of the book's total length, is strictly a history of the city of Branton Hills and John Gadsby's place in it, while the second part of the book fleshes out its main characters.

The novel is written from the point of view of an anonymous narrator, who continually complains about his poor writing skills and often uses circumlocution. "Now, naturally, in writing such a story as this, with its conditions as laid down in its Introduction, it is not surprising that an occasional 'rough spot' in composition is found", the narrator says. "So I trust that a critical public will hold constantly in mind that I am voluntarily avoiding words containing that symbol which is, by far, of most common inclusion in writing our Anglo-Saxon as it is, today".[5]

Example prose edit

The book's opening two paragraphs are:[6]

If Youth, throughout all history, had had a champion to stand up for it; to show a doubting world that a child can think; and, possibly, do it practically; you wouldn't constantly run across folks today who claim that "a child don't know anything." A child's brain starts functioning at birth; and has, amongst its many infant convolutions, thousands of dormant atoms, into which God has put a mystic possibility for noticing an adult's act, and figuring out its purport.

Up to about its primary school days a child thinks, naturally, only of play. But many a form of play contains disciplinary factors. "You can't do this," or "that puts you out," shows a child that it must think, practically, or fail. Now, if, throughout childhood, a brain has no opposition, it is plain that it will attain a position of "status quo," as with our ordinary animals. Man knows not why a cow, dog or lion was not born with a brain on a par with ours; why such animals cannot add, subtract, or obtain from books and schooling, that paramount position which Man holds today.

Publication and composition edit

Wright appears to have worked on the manuscript for a number of years. Though its official publication date is 1939, references in newspaper humor columns are made to his manuscript of a book without an "e" years earlier. Prior to publication he occasionally referred to his manuscript as Champion of Youth. In October 1930, while Wright was living near Tampa, Florida, he wrote a letter to The Evening Independent newspaper, boasted that he had written a fine lipogrammatic work, and suggested the paper hold a lipogram competition, with $250 for the winner. The paper turned him down.[7]

Wright struggled to find a publisher for the book, and eventually used Wetzel Publishing Co., a self-publishing press. A 2007 post on the Bookride blog about rare books says a warehouse holding copies of Gadsby burned shortly after the book was printed, destroying "most copies of the ill fated novel". The blog post says the book was never reviewed "and only kept alive by the efforts of a few avant garde French intellos and assorted connoisseurs of the odd, weird and zany". The book's scarcity and oddness has seen original copies priced at $4,000[8] to $7,500[9] by book dealers. Wright died the same year of publication, 1939.

In 1937, Wright said writing the book was a challenge and the author of an article on his efforts in The Oshkosh Daily recommended composing lipograms for insomnia sufferers.[10] Wright said in his introduction to Gadsby that "this story was written, not through any attempt to attain literary merit, but due to a somewhat balky nature, caused by hearing it so constantly claimed that 'it can't be done'". He said he tied down the "e" key on his typewriter while completing the final manuscript. "This was done so that none of that vowel might slip in, accidentally; and many did try to do so!"[11] And in fact, the 1939 printing by the Wetzel Publishing Co. contains four such slips, the word "the" on pages 51, 103 and 124, and the word "officers" on page 213.[12][13][14][15]

Reception and influence edit

La Disparition (A Void) is a 1969 lipogrammatic French novel partly inspired by Gadsby[16] that likewise omits the letter "e" and is 50,000 words long.[8][better source needed] Its author, Georges Perec, was introduced to Wright's book by a friend of his in Oulipo, a multinational constrained-writing group.[17] Perec was aware from Wright's lack of success that publication of such a work "was taking a risk" of finishing up "with nothing [but] a Gadsby".[18] As a nod to Wright, La Disparition contains a character named "Lord Gadsby V. Wright",[19] a tutor to protagonist Anton Voyl; in addition, a composition attributed to Voyl in La Disparition is actually a quotation from Gadsby.[4]

Douglas Hofstadter's 1997 book Le Ton beau de Marot quotes parts of Gadsby for illustration.[20]

An article in the Oshkosh Daily in 1937 wrote (lipogrammatically) that the manuscript was "amazingly smooth. No halting parts. A continuity of plot and almost classic clarity obtains".[10] The Village Voice wrote a humor column about Gadsby. Author Ed Park jokingly aped Wright's style ("Lipogram aficionados—folks who lash words and (alas!) brains so as to omit particular symbols—did in fact gasp, saying, 'Hold that ringing communication tool for a bit! What about J. Gadsby?'").[4] David Crystal, host of BBC Radio 4's linguistics program English Now, called it "probably the most ambitious work ever attempted in this genre".[21] Trevor Kitson, writing in New Zealand's Manawatu Standard in 2006, said he was prompted to write a short lipogram after seeing Wright's book. The attempt gave him an appreciation for how difficult Wright's task was, but he was less impressed with the result. "It seems extraordinarily twee (not that it uses that word, of course) and mostly about all-American kids going to church and getting married" he wrote.[22]

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Wright, Ernest Vincent (1939). Gadsby: A Story of Over 50,000 Words Without Using the Letter "E"  (1st ed.). Los Angeles, California: Wetzel Publishing Co. pp. 51, 103, 124, 213.
    1. "Amongst the boys, cast a fond look upon..."
    2. "And with that big Municipal Band a-booming and blaring, and the crowd of our old Organization girls pushing forward..."
    3. "...who found Nina frantic from not knowing Virginia's condition, nor why the pair of youths shot madly away without calling anybody."
    • "...with a lot of big shouting patrol officers, asking..."
  2. ^ Gadsby: A Story of 50,000 Words Introduction, online copy hosted at Spineless Books
  3. ^ Eckler, Albert Ross, ed. (1986). Names and Games: Onomastics and Recreational Linguistics: An Anthology of 99 Articles Published in Word Ways, the Journal of Recreational Linguistics from February 1968 to August 1985. University Press of America. ISBN 978-0-8191-5350-0.
  4. ^ a b c Park, Ed (6 August 2002). "Egadsby! Ernest Vincent Wright's Machine Dreams". The Village Voice.
  5. ^ "Gadsby: A Story of 50,000 Words". from the original on August 17, 2003. Retrieved 2003-08-23 – via Spineless Books.[page needed]
  6. ^ Gadsby at Project Gutenberg
  7. ^ "The Rambler (humor column)". The Evening Independent. 3 April 1937.
  8. ^ a b "Gadsby. A Story of Over 50.000 Words Without Using the Letter E. 1939". Bookride blog. 24 February 2007.
  9. ^ . Rulon-Miller Books. 2013. Archived from the original on 2014-02-02. Retrieved 2013-11-06.
  10. ^ a b Clausen, Walter B. (March 25, 1937). "Fifty Thousand Words Minus". The Oskhosh Daily.
  11. ^ Gadsby: A Story of 50,000 Words Online copy hosted at Spineless Books, Introduction
  12. ^ Gadsby: A Story of 50,000 Words page 51 of 1939 printing by Wetzel Publishing Co.
  13. ^ Gadsby: A Story of 50,000 Words page 103 of 1939 printing by Wetzel Publishing Co.
  14. ^ Gadsby: A Story of 50,000 Words page 124 of 1939 printing by Wetzel Publishing Co.
  15. ^ Gadsby: A Story of 50,000 Words page 213 of 1939 printing by Wetzel Publishing Co.
  16. ^ Abish 1995, p. X11
  17. ^ Bellos 1993, p. 395
  18. ^ Bellos 1993, p. 399
  19. ^ Sturrock 1999
  20. ^ Hofstadter, Douglas (1998). Le Ton beu de Marot: In Praise of the Music of Language. Perseus Books Group. ISBN 978-0-465-08645-0.
  21. ^ Crystal 2001, p. 63
  22. ^ It Isn't Easy, Manawatu Standard, Trevor Kitson, 24 May 2006

Sources edit

  • Abish, Walter (March 12, 1995), , The Washington Post, p. X11, archived from the original on October 20, 2012, The history of the lipogram dates back to the ancient Greeks. Its many more recent practitioners include Mallarme, Rimbaud, Thomas Hood and an American, Ernest Vincent Wright, who omitted the letter "e" from his novel Gadsby, published in 1939. Indeed, Wright may have served as a model for Perec, for he is referred to a number of times in A Void as "The Boss" to highlight his significance..
  • Bellos, David (1993), Georges Perec: A Life in Words in Words: A Biography, ISBN 978-0-87923-980-0.
  • Bookride (2007), "Gadsby. A Story of Over 50.000 Words Without Using the Letter E. 1939", Bookride, retrieved 2008-11-04.
  • Crystal, David (2001), Language Play, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, ISBN 978-0-226-12205-2.
  • Eckler, Albert Ross, ed. (1986), Names and Games: Onomastics and Recreational Linguistics: An Anthology of 99 Articles Published in Word Ways, the Journal of Recreational Linguistics from February 1968 to August 1985, Lanham, MD: University Press of America, ISBN 978-0-8191-5350-0.
  • Grambs, David (1985), Literary Companion Dictionary: Words about Words, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-7102-0052-5.
  • Hofstadter, Douglas R. (2006), Lipogrammatic Autobiography ... or ... Autobiographical Lipogram, Stanford, retrieved 2008-11-04.
  • Lederer, Richard (1998), The Word Circus: a Letter-Perfect Book, Springfield: Merriam-Webster, ISBN 978-0-87779-354-0
  • Rulon-Miller Books (2013), "Online List, September 2013: Recent Acquisitions", , archived from the original on 2014-02-02, retrieved 2013-11-06.
  • Salomon, David (2004), Data Compression: The Complete Reference (3rd ed.), Springer, ISBN 978-0-387-40697-8.
  • Sturrock, John (1999), The Word from Paris: Essays on Modern French Thinkers and Writers, Verso, ISBN 978-1-85984-163-1.

External links edit

gadsby, novel, confused, with, great, gatsby, gadsby, 1939, novel, ernest, vincent, wright, written, without, words, that, contain, letter, most, common, letter, english, work, that, deliberately, avoids, certain, letters, known, lipogram, plot, revolves, arou. Not to be confused with The Great Gatsby Gadsby is a 1939 novel by Ernest Vincent Wright written without words that contain the letter E the most common letter in English A work that deliberately avoids certain letters is known as a lipogram The plot revolves around the dying fictional city of Branton Hills which is revitalized as a result of the efforts of protagonist John Gadsby and a youth organizer GadsbyFront dust jacket of the 1939 first editionAuthorErnest Vincent WrightCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishGenreNovel lipogram omitting the letter EPublisherWetzel Publishing Co Publication date1939Media typePrint hardcover Pages260 ppOCLC57759048Though vanity published and little noticed in its time the book has since become a favorite of fans of constrained writing and is a sought after rarity among some book collectors The first edition carries on title page and cover the subtitle A Story of Over 50 000 Words Without Using the Letter E with the variant 50 000 Word Novel Without the Letter E on the dust jacket sometimes dropped from late reprints Despite Wright s claim the work accidentally contains four uses of the letter e the three times and officers once 1 Contents 1 Lipogrammatic quality 2 Plot and structure 2 1 Example prose 3 Publication and composition 4 Reception and influence 5 References 5 1 Footnotes 5 2 Sources 6 External linksLipogrammatic quality editIn the introduction to the book which not being part of the story does contain the letter e Wright says his primary difficulty was avoiding the ed suffix for past tense verbs He made extensive use of verbs that do not take the ed suffix and constructions with do and did for instance did walk instead of walked Scarcity of word options also drastically limited discussion involving quantity Wright could not write about any number between six and thirty pronouns and many common words 2 An article in the linguistic periodical Word Ways said that 250 of the 500 most commonly used words in English were still available to Wright despite the omission of words with e 3 Wright uses abbreviations on occasion but only if the full form is similarly lipogrammatic e g Dr Doctor and P S postscript would be allowed but not Mr Mister Wright also turns famous sayings into lipograms Instead of William Congreve s original line Music has charms to soothe a savage breast Wright writes that music hath charms to calm a wild bosom John Keats a thing of beauty is a joy forever becomes a charming thing is a joy always 4 In other respects Wright does not avoid topics which would otherwise require the letter e for example a detailed description of a horse drawn fire engine is made without using the words horse fire or engine Plot and structure editJohn Gadsby 50 is alarmed by the decline of his hometown Branton Hills and rallies the city s youth to form an Organization of Youth to build civic spirit and improve living standards Gadsby and his youthful army despite some opposition transform Branton Hills from a stagnant municipality into a bustling thriving city Toward the book s conclusion the members of Gadsby s organization receive diplomas in honor of their work Gadsby becomes mayor and helps increase Branton Hills population from 2 000 to 60 000 The story starts around 1906 and continues through World War I Prohibition and President Warren G Harding s administration Gadsby is divided into two parts the first about a quarter of the book s total length is strictly a history of the city of Branton Hills and John Gadsby s place in it while the second part of the book fleshes out its main characters The novel is written from the point of view of an anonymous narrator who continually complains about his poor writing skills and often uses circumlocution Now naturally in writing such a story as this with its conditions as laid down in its Introduction it is not surprising that an occasional rough spot in composition is found the narrator says So I trust that a critical public will hold constantly in mind that I am voluntarily avoiding words containing that symbol which is by far of most common inclusion in writing our Anglo Saxon as it is today 5 Example prose edit The book s opening two paragraphs are 6 If Youth throughout all history had had a champion to stand up for it to show a doubting world that a child can think and possibly do it practically you wouldn t constantly run across folks today who claim that a child don t know anything A child s brain starts functioning at birth and has amongst its many infant convolutions thousands of dormant atoms into which God has put a mystic possibility for noticing an adult s act and figuring out its purport Up to about its primary school days a child thinks naturally only of play But many a form of play contains disciplinary factors You can t do this or that puts you out shows a child that it must think practically or fail Now if throughout childhood a brain has no opposition it is plain that it will attain a position of status quo as with our ordinary animals Man knows not why a cow dog or lion was not born with a brain on a par with ours why such animals cannot add subtract or obtain from books and schooling that paramount position which Man holds today Publication and composition editWright appears to have worked on the manuscript for a number of years Though its official publication date is 1939 references in newspaper humor columns are made to his manuscript of a book without an e years earlier Prior to publication he occasionally referred to his manuscript as Champion of Youth In October 1930 while Wright was living near Tampa Florida he wrote a letter to The Evening Independent newspaper boasted that he had written a fine lipogrammatic work and suggested the paper hold a lipogram competition with 250 for the winner The paper turned him down 7 Wright struggled to find a publisher for the book and eventually used Wetzel Publishing Co a self publishing press A 2007 post on the Bookride blog about rare books says a warehouse holding copies of Gadsby burned shortly after the book was printed destroying most copies of the ill fated novel The blog post says the book was never reviewed and only kept alive by the efforts of a few avant garde French intellos and assorted connoisseurs of the odd weird and zany The book s scarcity and oddness has seen original copies priced at 4 000 8 to 7 500 9 by book dealers Wright died the same year of publication 1939 In 1937 Wright said writing the book was a challenge and the author of an article on his efforts in The Oshkosh Daily recommended composing lipograms for insomnia sufferers 10 Wright said in his introduction to Gadsby that this story was written not through any attempt to attain literary merit but due to a somewhat balky nature caused by hearing it so constantly claimed that it can t be done He said he tied down the e key on his typewriter while completing the final manuscript This was done so that none of that vowel might slip in accidentally and many did try to do so 11 And in fact the 1939 printing by the Wetzel Publishing Co contains four such slips the word the on pages 51 103 and 124 and the word officers on page 213 12 13 14 15 Reception and influence editLa Disparition A Void is a 1969 lipogrammatic French novel partly inspired by Gadsby 16 that likewise omits the letter e and is 50 000 words long 8 better source needed Its author Georges Perec was introduced to Wright s book by a friend of his in Oulipo a multinational constrained writing group 17 Perec was aware from Wright s lack of success that publication of such a work was taking a risk of finishing up with nothing but a Gadsby 18 As a nod to Wright La Disparition contains a character named Lord Gadsby V Wright 19 a tutor to protagonist Anton Voyl in addition a composition attributed to Voyl in La Disparition is actually a quotation from Gadsby 4 Douglas Hofstadter s 1997 book Le Ton beau de Marot quotes parts of Gadsby for illustration 20 An article in the Oshkosh Daily in 1937 wrote lipogrammatically that the manuscript was amazingly smooth No halting parts A continuity of plot and almost classic clarity obtains 10 The Village Voice wrote a humor column about Gadsby Author Ed Park jokingly aped Wright s style Lipogram aficionados folks who lash words and alas brains so as to omit particular symbols did in fact gasp saying Hold that ringing communication tool for a bit What about J Gadsby 4 David Crystal host of BBC Radio 4 s linguistics program English Now called it probably the most ambitious work ever attempted in this genre 21 Trevor Kitson writing in New Zealand s Manawatu Standard in 2006 said he was prompted to write a short lipogram after seeing Wright s book The attempt gave him an appreciation for how difficult Wright s task was but he was less impressed with the result It seems extraordinarily twee not that it uses that word of course and mostly about all American kids going to church and getting married he wrote 22 References editFootnotes edit Wright Ernest Vincent 1939 Gadsby A Story of Over 50 000 Words Without Using the Letter E 1st ed Los Angeles California Wetzel Publishing Co pp 51 103 124 213 Amongst the boys cast a fond look upon And with that big Municipal Band a booming and blaring and the crowd of our old Organization girls pushing forward who found Nina frantic from not knowing Virginia s condition nor why the pair of youths shot madly away without calling anybody with a lot of big shouting patrol officers asking Gadsby A Story of 50 000 Words Introduction online copy hosted at Spineless Books Eckler Albert Ross ed 1986 Names and Games Onomastics and Recreational Linguistics An Anthology of 99 Articles Published in Word Ways the Journal of Recreational Linguistics from February 1968 to August 1985 University Press of America ISBN 978 0 8191 5350 0 a b c Park Ed 6 August 2002 Egadsby Ernest Vincent Wright s Machine Dreams The Village Voice Gadsby A Story of 50 000 Words Archived from the original on August 17 2003 Retrieved 2003 08 23 via Spineless Books page needed Gadsby at Project Gutenberg The Rambler humor column The Evening Independent 3 April 1937 a b Gadsby A Story of Over 50 000 Words Without Using the Letter E 1939 Bookride blog 24 February 2007 Online List September 2013 Recent Acquisitions Rulon Miller Books 2013 Archived from the original on 2014 02 02 Retrieved 2013 11 06 a b Clausen Walter B March 25 1937 Fifty Thousand Words Minus The Oskhosh Daily Gadsby A Story of 50 000 Words Online copy hosted at Spineless Books Introduction Gadsby A Story of 50 000 Words page 51 of 1939 printing by Wetzel Publishing Co Gadsby A Story of 50 000 Words page 103 of 1939 printing by Wetzel Publishing Co Gadsby A Story of 50 000 Words page 124 of 1939 printing by Wetzel Publishing Co Gadsby A Story of 50 000 Words page 213 of 1939 printing by Wetzel Publishing Co Abish 1995 p X11 Bellos 1993 p 395 Bellos 1993 p 399 Sturrock 1999 Hofstadter Douglas 1998 Le Ton beu de Marot In Praise of the Music of Language Perseus Books Group ISBN 978 0 465 08645 0 Crystal 2001 p 63 It Isn t Easy Manawatu Standard Trevor Kitson 24 May 2006 Sources edit Abish Walter March 12 1995 Vanishing Act Review of A Void The Washington Post p X11 archived from the original on October 20 2012 The history of the lipogram dates back to the ancient Greeks Its many more recent practitioners include Mallarme Rimbaud Thomas Hood and an American Ernest Vincent Wright who omitted the letter e from his novel Gadsby published in 1939 Indeed Wright may have served as a model for Perec for he is referred to a number of times in A Void as The Boss to highlight his significance Bellos David 1993 Georges Perec A Life in Words in Words A Biography ISBN 978 0 87923 980 0 Bookride 2007 Gadsby A Story of Over 50 000 Words Without Using the Letter E 1939 Bookride retrieved 2008 11 04 Crystal David 2001 Language Play Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 12205 2 Eckler Albert Ross ed 1986 Names and Games Onomastics and Recreational Linguistics An Anthology of 99 Articles Published in Word Ways the Journal of Recreational Linguistics from February 1968 to August 1985 Lanham MD University Press of America ISBN 978 0 8191 5350 0 Grambs David 1985 Literary Companion Dictionary Words about Words Routledge ISBN 978 0 7102 0052 5 Hofstadter Douglas R 2006 Lipogrammatic Autobiography or Autobiographical Lipogram Stanford retrieved 2008 11 04 Lederer Richard 1998 The Word Circus a Letter Perfect Book Springfield Merriam Webster ISBN 978 0 87779 354 0 Rulon Miller Books 2013 Online List September 2013 Recent Acquisitions Rulon Miller Books archived from the original on 2014 02 02 retrieved 2013 11 06 Salomon David 2004 Data Compression The Complete Reference 3rd ed Springer ISBN 978 0 387 40697 8 Sturrock John 1999 The Word from Paris Essays on Modern French Thinkers and Writers Verso ISBN 978 1 85984 163 1 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Gadsby Gadsby at Internet Archive scanned book Gadsby at Project Gutenberg Gadsby at Faded Page Canada nbsp Gadsby public domain audiobook at LibriVox Miscellany Time April 5 1937 Notification of Wright s finishing Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gadsby novel amp oldid 1214534233, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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