[Membroj] Handbook of Volapük

Ralph Dumain rdumain at autodidactproject.org
Mon Aug 24 18:05:01 EDT 2009


Menad bal pük bal !

Not quite what you think. Yes, Charles E. 
Sprague’s 1888 Handbook of Volapük is available online:

http://personal.southern.edu/~caviness/Volapuk/HBoV/

. . . and there are other resources on Volapük available online:

http://personal.southern.edu/~caviness/Volapuk/

But what I'm talking about here is a recent, 
novel--yes, a novel!--published in 2006: A 
Handbook of Volapük by Andrew Drummond.

Here is the amazon.com entry,

http://www.amazon.com/Handbook-Volapuk-Andrew-Drummond/dp/1904598676/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1251030403&sr=1-1

but more importantly, Andy Drummond has his own 
web site with a section on the novel:

http://www.andydrummond.net/volapuk.html

The full title:

A Hand-Book of Volapük and an Elementary Manual of its Grammar and Vocabulary,
Prepared from the Gathered Papers of Gemmell Hunter Ibidem Justice;
Together with an Account of Events Relating to 
the Annual General Meeting of 1891
of the Edinburgh Society for the Propagation of a Universal Language.
Edited for the First Time by Dr. Charles Cordiner,
Emeritus Professor of Phrenology at Fraserburgh University.

Partisans of Volapük, Esperanto, and rival 
international language projects battle it out in 
late 19th century Europe. A whodunit of historic proportions.

There are links to other pages, including an 
extract, reviews, and a web guide to materials on Volapük:

http://www.andydrummond.net/Volapuk/Materials.htm

See also this review:

"Universal Languages" by Hannah Adcock
http://textualities.net/hannah-adcock/universal-languages/

I've never seen this book, let alone read on, but 
I'll be on the lookout. Might be a good book for a reading club, perhaps?

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