This week's theme: words about words.

lipogram (LIP-uh-gram) noun

   A piece of writing that avoids one or more letters of the alphabet.

[From Greek lipo- (lacking) + gram (something written).]

Today's word in Visual Thesaurus: http://visualthesaurus.com/?w1=lipogram

   In spite of what it sounds like, a lipogram is not a message with a kiss.
   Lipogram is a work written with a constraint.

   Imagine you've just started your great epic novel and one of the keys on
   your keyboard is broken. It would be trivial to manage without a Q, X,
   or Z, but writing without a single E -- ah, that'd be some challenge. If
   it sounds undoable, consider that whole books have been written without
   an E, the most used letter in the English language. Without an E, one has
   to give up some of the most common pronouns such as he, she, we, me, and
   so on. What's more, even the article "the" is barred.

   Coming back to books written without Es (I'm sure writing them is not
   something everyone can do with ease), Ernest Vincent Wright's 1939 novel
   Gadsby is written without the second vowel. One of the best known E-less 
   works is Georges Perec's lipogrammatic French novel, La Disparition (The
   Disappearance). Its plot is full of wordplay, puzzles, and other word-fun. 
   For example, a character is missing eggs, or is unable to remember his 
   name because it needs E in the spelling.

   Though it may be hard to believe considering the restriction under
   which it is written, the novel is said to be quite engrossing. Apparently,
   many reviewers were not even aware that a special constraint was used in
   writing it. After writing the novel, Perec faced a protest from the A, I,
   O, and U keys on his keyboard that they had to do all the work and E was
   leading an e'sy life. So Perec had no choice but to write a short work
   called Les Revenentes, where he put to work all those idle Es: the only
   vowel used was E.

   If that doesn't sound incredible enough, here is more. La Disparition has
   been translated into English as "A Void" by Gilbert Adair. Of course, the
   translation also doesn't have any E in it. In case you have not already
   noticed, both the phrases "La Disparition" and "A Void" have only vowels
   A, I, and O in them, same as in the word "lipogram". And Void's protagonist
   is named Anton Vowl.

   One can write numbers from zero, one, two,... onwards, and not use the A
   key on the keyboard until reaching thousand. As for the literary merit of
   that composition, I'm not very certain.

-Anu Garg (gargATwordsmith.org)

  "Go on, r*ad my lipogram!"
   Rod*rick Nord*ll; What's Missing From This Story?; The Christian Science
   Monitor (Boston, Massachusetts); Oct 31, 2002.

Sponsored by:
Instead of sponsors' messages today we include the link to the
International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
for earthquake relief efforts in South Asia: http://www.ifrc.org

............................................................................
Literature is the art of writing something that will be read twice;
journalism what will be grasped at once. -Cyril Connolly, critic and editor
(1903-1974)

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Pronunciation:
http://wordsmith.org/words/lipogram.wav
http://wordsmith.org/words/lipogram.ram

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