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Ernest Vincent Wright

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ernest Vincent Wright (1872 – October 7, 1939[1]) was an American writer known for his book Gadsby, a 50,000-word novel which, except for the introduction and a note at the end, did not use the letter "e".

Wright in 1939

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Transcription

Biography

The Wonderful Fairies of the Sun by Ernest Vincent Wright (illustrations by Cora M. Norman

The biographical details of his life are unclear. A 2002 article in the Village Voice by Ed Park said he might have been English by birth but was more probably American. The article said he might have served in the navy and that he has been incorrectly called a graduate of MIT. The article says that he attended a vocational high school attached to MIT in 1888 but there is no record that he graduated. Park said rumors that Wright died within hours of Gadsby being published are untrue.[2]

In October 1930 Wright approached the Evening Independent newspaper and proposed it sponsor a blue lipogram writing competition, with $250 for the winner. In the letter, he boasted of the quality of Gadsby. The newspaper declined his offer.[3]

A 2007 post on the Bookride blog about rare books says Wright spent five and a half months writing Gadsby on a typewriter with the "e" key tied down. According to the unsigned entry at Bookride, a warehouse holding copies of Gadsby burned down 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 copies priced at $4,000 by book dealers.[4]

Wright completed a draft of Gadsby in 1936, during a nearly six-month stint at the National Military Home in California. He failed to find a publisher and used a self-publishing press to bring out the book.[4]

Wright previously authored three other books: The Wonderful Fairies of the Sun (1896), The Fairies That Run the World and How They Do It (1903), and Thoughts and Reveries of an American Bluejacket (1918). His humorous poem, "When Father Carves the Duck", can be found in some anthologies.[5]

References

  1. ^ Wilson library bulletin: Volume 14(3, November 1939): 202.
  2. ^ Egadsby! Ernest Vincent Wright's Machine Dreams, Ed Park, The Village Voice, August 6, 2002
  3. ^ The Evening Independent, April 3, 1937, The Rambler humor column.
  4. ^ a b Bookride blog February 24, 2007.
  5. ^ Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen. The Railroad trainman, Volume 23, p. 991.

Further reading

  • Burton, Walt (March 25, 1937), "Fifty Thousand Words Minus", Oshkosh Daily Northwestern, p. 20, Publication of a composition without a common fifth symbol and acclaim of it as most odd got him to thinking. And so Wright got to it writing .... It was difficult at first. Most nouns would not do. 'Just try it,' Wright said, grinning and pulling at gray hairs of his trim, triangular growth on his chin. Four months and 30 days it took to do it all .... Writing this way is a good thing for an insomnia victim to try.
  • Sturrock, John (1999), The Word from Paris: Essays on Modern French Thinkers and Writers, Verso, ISBN 978-1-85984-163-1.

External links

This page was last edited on 4 September 2023, at 04:59
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