David Grambs
The Describer's Dictionary
A Treasury of Terms and Literary Quotations
Have you ever found yourself grasping in vain for that ideal descriptive word
lost somewhere within the misty recesses of your vocabulary? Or felt
frustrated that an oddly shaped structure or pretty setting you wished to
portray in writing didn't quite translate clearly to paper?
If the answer to either of these questions is yes, then The Describer's
Dictionary is exactly the book you need. Open it, and you have not only
just the right words butbringing them to lifestellar literary
examples of descriptive writing as well.
The Dictionary concern itself with the observable, from shapes to
buildings to human beings. "Referably" organized, the book uses a handy
reverse, definition-to-term format that makes it easy to zero in on the term
you're seeking. For example, look up "Noses" to find "aquiline,"
"leptorrhine," and "snub-nosed." And as an inspiration to any
writershowing how it's done by the besthundreds of colorful and
evocative descriptive passages from such diverse authors as Dickens, Darwin,
and Updike appear on facing pages, making this a singularly and richly
different kind of reference book.
The craft of description lives in literature, conversation, journalism, and
personal letters. For help in painting pictures with the English language,
The Desciber's Dictionary is one of the most indispensable reference
tools you can own.
David Grambs lives in New York City.
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