I don’t know that I can say that I’ve always been interested in languages, but ever since I served a mission in Russia for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and learned Russian, I’ve had an interest in languages. I took German in junior and high school, but never made any real progress. In high school, when they started teaching us about accusative and dative cases, my brain lost it. I remember doing a homework assignment dealing with those and asking my native German-speaking grandmother and my German-speaking father for help and still just having brain cramps. Learning Russian was also very difficult, but I was able to overcome my problem with cases, and it’s been fun to attempt to keep some of these language skills from earlier in my life up since then. Learning foreign languages like German and Russian also helped me understand things like English grammar and the etymology of English words a little better. As a really young kid, I remember a copy of the Merriam-Webster dictionary on our shelf and sometimes asking my mom why we never read “the big, red book.”
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Overall, I enjoyed reading the book and found it interesting and informational. Reading of the American Founding and those who played integral roles in those events is always interesting. I found some of the discussion of early American literature and the academic scene to be less intriguing, but understand that it helped set the stage for Webster’s work and may be a necessary part of telling his story. It seemed the author wanted to diagnose Webster with some kind of mental disorder (OCD, autism, etc.), but never really came out and said it, just approached it tangentially. That constant repetition of that theme was a little distracting. The dictionary itself is only the last quarter of the book, so there’s a lot of other material to get through, but I thought the case for Webster’s role in America becoming its own entity, separate from Great Britain, was made convincingly. Those interested in the Revolution and the Founding, not just nerdy linguistic things will find the book of interest.
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