Review
'Ingenious and fascinating' (The Sunday Times 20050418)
'Excellent.' (Daily Express 20060401)
'Immensely enjoyable, easily erudite' (Scotland On Sunday 20060423)
'I can warmly recommend Henry Hitching's book...affectionate in its portrayal of Johnson, the book itself is immensely likeable, written with serious intent and gentle good humour.' (Spectator 20060416)
'Lively and entertaining' (Observer 20060428)
'A pleasant stroll, with a genial guide, through Johnson's life' (The Independent on Sunday 20060421)
'Clever, wittily-written and amusingly-arranged' (The Guardian 20060410)
'A rich, lively and attractive book.' (The Times Literary Supplement 20060421)
'Hitchings writes with Johnsonian clarity and verve ... This is a charming book' (Evening Standard 20060507)
'A clever, sympathetic and witty sketch of both man and book.'
(Waterstones Books Quarterly 20060520)'A goldmine of pleasures...Hitchings has an infectious relish for words' - Phil Baker (Sunday Times 20060501)
'Full of elegance and nail-on-the-head wit'
(Sunday Telegraph 20060501)'Hitchings has produced an absorbing account of Johnson's Dictionary that is as likeable as it is learned'
(Independent 20060501)'Full of serendipitous felicities'
(Times Higher Education Supplement 20060501)'Hitchings excellent book is both a great potted guide to the dictionary and its creation, and a marvellous biography of Johnson...A must-have for devotees of the English Language'
(Observer 20060501)'Excellent... Hitching's book is full of serendipitous felicities'
(David Nokes, Times Higher Educational Supplement 20060501)'In [Johnson's] description of "dull" he writes: "Not exhilarating; not delightful; as, to make dictionaries is dull work." Nobody could describe Hitching's book as dull'
(Colin Waters, Sunday Herald 20060501)'This story is a pleasurable stroll through Johnson's life, and combines elements of biography with social history and an examination of Johnson's concerns, illustrated by examples from the great work itself.'
(Irish Times 20060501)'Memorable passages on a range of fascinating subjects.'
(The Good Book Guide 20060501)'An engaging profile of one of London's great characters'
(Time Out, Tom Howard 20051202)'Henry Hitchings (a fine 18th-century name that) is a remarkable young scholar of the age of Johnson, and his DR JOHNSON'S DICTIONARY, arranged alphabetically like the eponymous original whose 250th anniversary it celebrates, offers an entertaining window on this most fascinating character and his times'
(BBC History Magazine 20051202)'Entertaining study...The great strength of Hitching's book is the compliment he pays to Johnson by so lavishly quoting from the Dictionary'
(Sunday Telegraph 20050402)'Hitchings has written a lively and appetite-whetting biography of the great book itself...one of the most fascinating and influential literary endeavours in the history of English literature'
(Herald 20041221)'Henry Hitchings' book on Samuel Johnson's mighty Dictionary is so good, so apposite, so chewy and edible, that I felt as if I were rereading it on my first pass'
(Will Self, New Statesman 20050401)'Hugely entertaining, it's a real treat for word lovers'
(Sainsburys Magazine 20050401)'The author is to be congratulated on narrating the drudgery of the dictionary's compilation so engagingly'
(Evening Standard )'The author has followed ably in the footsteps of his subject, producing a witty and learned book on a man whose work shaped, and continues to shape, the way we speak and think'
(The Good Book Guide )'An extraordinary read'
(Venue )'This is a delightful book about an extraordinary man. I suspect Dr Johnson himself would have approved... and there's no greater praise than that'
(John Humphrys )'A lively and appetite-whetting biography of the great book'
(Herald )'Henry Hitchings's book is lively, erudite and enriched with colourful anecdotes - a masterful account of one of the greatest literary triumphs of the eighteenth century'
(Giles Milton )'Engaging'
(Literary Review )'This is a delightful book about an extraordinary man. I suspect Dr Johnson himself would have approved . . . and there's no greater praise than that'
(John Humphreys )
