Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Henry Hitchings

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Known for
  
Author and critic

Website
  
www.henryhitchings.com


Name
  
Henry Hitchings

Role
  
Author

Henry Hitchings imagesbarnesandnoblecompImagesbnreview20131

Born
  
11 December 1974 (age 49) (
1974-12-11
)

Alma mater
  
Eton College Christ Church, Oxford University College London

Education
  
Christ Church, Oxford, Eton College, University College London

Books
  
The Language Wars: A H, The Secret Life of Words, Sorry!: The English and Their, How to Really Talk about Bo, Dr Johnson's Dictionar

Henry hitchings the secret life of words part 1 of 2


Henry Hitchings FRSL (born 11 December 1974) is an author, reviewer and critic, specializing in narrative non-fiction, with a particular emphasis on language and cultural history. The second of his books, The Secret Life of Words: How English Became English, won the 2008 John Llewellyn Rhys Prize.

Contents

He was a King's Scholar at Eton College before going to Christ Church, Oxford, and then to University College London to research his PhD on Samuel Johnson.

Henry hitchings the secret life of words part 2 of 2


Dr Johnson's Dictionary

In 2005 he published Dr Johnson's Dictionary: The Extraordinary Story of the Book that Defined the World, a biography of Samuel Johnson's epochal A Dictionary of the English Language (1755). The first popular account of Dr Johnson's magnum opus, it "charts the struggle and ultimate triumph of one of the first attempts to 'fix' the language, which despite its imperfections proved to be one of the English language's most significant cultural monuments". Avoiding the more usual portrayal of Dr Johnson as "a lovable eccentric", Hitchings "keeps drawing attention to the unremitting intelligence that Johnson's lexicographical labours demanded, not least in separating out the ramifying senses of common words". Whilst declaring, "Hitchings's task is to rescue Johnson from Boswell's attentions," Will Self pointed out, "The Johnson of the Dictionary was never known to Boswell, and as the older man was ill-disposed to animadvert on his younger self, Boswell got such basics as the great man's working methods on the Dictionary glaringly wrong. Not so Hitchings."

The American edition was titled Defining the World: The Extraordinary Story of Dr Johnson's Dictionary.

In the United States, Defining the World won the Modern Language Association's prize for the best work by an independent scholar in 2005.

The Secret Life of Words

In April 2008 Hitchings published The Secret Life of Words: How English Became English, a study of loanwords, calques and their cultural significance. Following the English language's history through "its debt to invasions, to threats from abroad, and to an island people's dealings with the world beyond its shores" the book examines its unbroken acquisitiveness—"but for all that [Hitchings'] true object is to reveal past frames of mind and to show how our present outlook is informed by the history squirreled away in the words we use". Instead of using history to explain language, Hitchings "picks words apart to find their origins" and then molds this "mountain of dense information into an elegant narrative". The Economist noted that "whatever is hybrid, fluid and unpoliced about English delights him".

The book was published in America under the same title the following September.

In November 2008 The Secret Life of Words won the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize, the first work of non-fiction to do so in six years. The chair of the judges, Henry Sutton, described it as a landmark, vast in scope and '"written with an unnerving precision, clarity and grace", adding "amazingly accessible, it's written with great grace and enthusiasm and humour, and is also a scholarly work." The shortlist had also included the winner of the 2008 Booker Prize, The White Tiger by Aravind Adiga.

In March 2009, on the strength of The Secret Life of Words, Hitchings was shortlisted for the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award. In June 2009 he received a Somerset Maugham Award.

The Language Wars

The Language Wars: A History of Proper English was published in February 2011. It is "a detailed narrative of the attempts ... to make rules about how we speak and write" and "a historical guide to the sometimes splenetic battles that have been fought over English down the centuries". Craig Brown called it a book "full of complex ideas expressed with crystal clarity", adding that "the range of Hitchings' knowledge and curiosity is remarkable". Writing in the Daily Telegraph, Charles Moore, after praising the book as "crisply written, amusing, informative and thought-provoking", commented that "it is an agony not to be able to use English properly. Mr Hitchings eschews the rules: he can do that only because he knows them".

The book was published in America under the same title in October 2011.

Who's Afraid of Jane Austen?

How to Really Talk About Books You Haven't Read, a guide to books and literary erudition, was released in October 2008. The paperback edition was given the name Who's Afraid of Jane Austen?: How to Really Talk About Books You Haven't Read.

Sorry! The English and their Manners

Hitchings's fifth book, Sorry! The English and their Manners, was published in January 2013. Writing about it in the Guardian, Ian Sansom commented that its research offered "a kind of restless, wandering, burrowing through history and ideas" and that the book "reveals ... the kind of writer Hitchings really is: an overseer, guardian, wise man, guide."

Browse

In 2016 he edited a collection of original essays about bookshops, with the title Browse: The World in Bookshops. Other contributors included Ali Smith, Elif Shafak, Juan Gabriel Vasquez and Alaa Al Aswany.

Other writing and television

In May 2009 Hitchings became the theatre critic on the London Evening Standard, replacing Nicholas de Jongh.

He has written for the Financial Times, the New Statesman, The Guardian, the Wall Street Journal and the Times Literary Supplement, amongst other publications, and has made radio, television and festival appearances.

Hitchings was the writer and presenter of the documentary Birth of the British Novel which was first broadcast on BBC Four on Monday 7 February 2011.

He became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2015.

References

Henry Hitchings Wikipedia