Paperback: 440 pages
Publisher: Sirius Fiction; 2 edition (September 2, 2008)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0964279517
ISBN-13: 978-0964279513
Product Dimensions: 6 x 1.1 x 9 inches
Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
Best Sellers Rank: #527,184 in Books (See Top 100 in Books) #228 in Books > Reference > Encyclopedias & Subject Guides > Literature #276 in Books > Literature & Fiction > History & Criticism > Genres & Styles > Science Fiction & Fantasy #315 in Books > Science Fiction & Fantasy > Science Fiction > History & Criticism
This book is useful but is sometimes puzzling.Some of the definitions are simply wrong, in fact some are so far off that you will wonder if Andre-Driussi perhaps is referring to a condensed, abridged, and slightly altered version of the series. Some very minor terms and characters mentioned in passing only once in the series are described here in some detail, while some important terms, places, and incidents integral to the storyline (such as the Torturer's Guild/Order of the Seekers for Truth and Penitence, to which Severian belonged) are not listed at all.Many of the definitions are, well, stretched. This book would be less than half the current size if you threw out all of the example sentences. For instead of just giving the definition, pronunciation and etymology of the listed term, the entry in many cases also gives the full sentence (from the book) in which the word was used. This is not necessary, since the entry also pinpoints the book, chapter, and page in which the term was used in the first place. Takes up a lot of space.Still, this book will save you from browsing through stacks of dictionaries looking for that obscure term.The definition will not always identify what language the word is, but the careful reader can soon learn to tell if it's Greek, Latin, French, or Spanish (as most of the "foreign" words here are). Some terms are defined in detail; they contain many examples of the word (and sentences/book excerpts), with real historical anecdotes, mythological references, hypotheses, comments, and squiggly line drawings. Some entries are short and abrupt: "marge: margin. (IV, chapter 13, 86)". Sometimes there is no definition at all; all you get for the entry is the sentence the word is in, and the location of the word.
LEXICON URTHUS is a dictionary prepared by Michael Andre-Driussi of the unusual words and names used by Gene Wolfe in his four-volume masterpiece The Book of the New Sun (and its coda THE URTH OF THE NEW SUN). Those who have read Wolfe's work know that he usually allows many of his archaic terms to be defined for the reader through context, but those wishing to know more about these words weird and wonderful can turn to this resource.The book doesn't limit itself merely to terminology, however, but also contains the names of characters and places. Many characters in the Book of the New Sun are named after obscure saints of early Christianity or the Middle Ages or mythological figures, and Andre-Driussi shows why they have the names they do. For example, "Nilammon", the man mentioned in passing by the caretaker who shows Severian a picture of the moon ("Now there's trees enough on it to hide Nilammon") is named after a 4th century Egyptian saint who hid in his cell to escape a mob that wanted to proclaim him bishop.Yet, Andre-Driussi sometimes goes astray. In the entry on Valeria, for example, he mentions several female saints, but doesn't mention who, I would say, is the most likely namesake of the character: Claudius' wife Valeria Messalina. The name of "Kim Lee Soong", the ancestor of the prisoners in the antechamber, is said to be Chinese, but clearly it is Korean. And occasionally Andre-Driussi makes pronouncements that are simply beyond reason, such as that Hethor is the same as Soong. The work is also clearly an amateur production, although Sirius Fiction has typeset and bound it quite nicely.Educated readers will already recognise many of these etymologies, and LEXICON URTHUS is no substitute for the Oxford English Dictionary and a good saints dictionary.
Lexicon Urthus: A Dictionary for the Urth Cycle The Lexicon (The Harry Potter Lexicon Reader's Guide Series Book 2) Beyond the Hebrew Lexicon: Learn To Do Hebrew Word Studies That Take You Beyond the Lexicon Shakespeare Lexicon and Quotation Dictionary, Vol. 1: 001 Shakespeare Lexicon and Quotation Dictionary, Vol. 2: 002 El Ciclo De Vida De La Rana/Life cycle of a frog (Ciclo De Vida / the Life Cycle) (Spanish Edition) Oxford Picture Dictionary English-Chinese: Bilingual Dictionary for Chinese speaking teenage and adult students of English (Oxford Picture Dictionary 2E) Oxford Picture Dictionary English-Spanish: Bilingual Dictionary for Spanish speaking teenage and adult students of English (Oxford Picture Dictionary 2E) Oxford Picture Dictionary English-Vietnamese: Bilingual Dictionary for Vietnamese speaking teenage and adult students of English (Oxford Picture Dictionary 2E) A Lexicon of Terror: Argentina and the Legacies of Torture, Revised and Updated with a New Epilogue Sumerians: The Land Of The Civilised Kings: Discover The Truth About - The Sumerians (Babylonia, Nibiru, Gilgamesh & Planet X) (Genesis, Assyrians, Ziggurat, Lexicon, Pantheon, Mesopotamia, Sumer) The Lexicon: A Cornucopia of Wonderful Words for the Inquisitive Word Lover Thayer's Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament: Coded with Strong's Concordance Numbers A Cycling Lexicon: Bicycle Headbadges from a Bygone Era Barron's Law Dictionary (Barron's Law Dictionary (Quality)) A Dictionary of Basic Law Terms (Black's Law Dictionary Series) The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory (Penguin Dictionary) Standard English-SerboCroatian, SerboCroatian-English Dictionary: A Dictionary of Bosnian, Croatian, and Serbian Standards Taber's Cyclopedic Medical Dictionary (Non-thumb-indexed Version) (Taber's Cyclopedic Medical Dictionary (Non-Indexed Version)) The Great English-Polish Dictionary (2 million words): interactive - replaces the standard Kindle e-reader dictionary