
Wordcatcher: An Odyssey into the World of Weird and Wonderful Words
Paperback
"In this spiffy little volume, Cousineau has gathered 250 words that have caught his fancy and tugged at his imagination." — Spirituality and Practice
"Phil Cousineau is a word wizard and his book, Wordcatcher, is a delightful adventure into a magical world. As I read his amazing etymological explanations of words from eldritch to floccinaucinihilipilification to lagniappe, I begin to understand why the bible says “in the beginning was the Word.” Phil has made clear that words don’t merely describe reality. They create it." —Deepak Chopra
“Phil Cousineau’s Wordcatcher is a wonderful meditation on words that can be read from beginning to end if you are obsessed with speech, greedy for mountain air, and into enlightened verbal play. Not a dry lexical listing, each word Cousineau chooses sings with cellos, vagabonds through tongues and history, and bounces like a balloon on the moon, and as high as his quirky imagination takes us. Compelled reading for residence in the ancient synagogue of the word.” —Willis Barnstone, author of The Restored New Testament and Ancient Greek Lyrics
“Stake out a claim next to the standard dictionary you use for this less-pendantic companion. It contains fewer words but sends up Fourth of July skyrockets on all of them. But caveat emptur, readers beware! Cousineau’s love affair with words is contagious and you are likely to end up lovesick with words yourself.”
—Huston Smith, author of The World’s Religions and Tales of Wonder
"I am awed by Phil Cousineau's scholarship and the overall view he has of inner matters. He has a genius for the soulful dimensions of words, and a rare intelligence for communicating the numinous dimension of language. Wordcatcher will grace the lives of all who read it, and inspire them to respect, even revere words as much as its author does." —Robert A. Johnson, author of He, She, and A Slender Thread
“A book that allows us to remember the genius of language—to see, feel and, it seems, even ‘taste’ the living-ness and poetry hidden within these many common and uncommon words. A delicious book.” — Jacob Needleman, author of What Is God?
"Writer, filmmaker, and Joseph Campbell biographer Phil Cousineau recounts a lifetime of collecting precious words.... Wordcatcher is a sumptuous feast for the logophile, featuring words like the dreamily melancholic "aphilophrenia" (the haunting feeling one is unloved). But lest you get a case of "hippomonstrosesquipedaliophobia" (the fear of long words), some plain language gems such as "sulky" and "jinx" also nestle among the pages." — Flavorpill