Word Freak

by Stefan Fatsis
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Word Freak
 
by
Stefan Fatsis
book data
950 ratings, 3.84 average rating, 210 reviews (more data...)
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published
2001 by Penguin

binding
Paperback

setting
Unknown

isbn
0618392505   (isbn13: 9780618392506)






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Sci Fi and Fantas...: Recommendations please 9 55 28 days ago, 05:47AM  
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 1391)




Tung
01/09/08

bookshelves: memoirs, non-fiction
Read in January, 2006
Fatsis, a columnist for various NY magazines, took a year off to investigate the world of competitive Scrabble. As someone who makes a living with words, and who grew up playing Scrabble, Fatsis does more than investigate this world; he immerses himself in it. The book functions half as nonfiction documentary, and half as memoir, as Fatsis details both the professional circuit and his rise through its ranks. Fatsis does a good job of balancing details of Scrabble’s history (both the history ...more
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Dave-O
07/13/07

Read in July, 2007
Stephen Fatsis writes a fast-paced, edge-of-your-seat book on the quirky, obsessive, very male-dominated world of competitive Scrabble playing. Although the cast of characters is fascinating enough, I was more interested in Fatsis' own transformation from "living room" player to a high-ranking qualifier in major tournaments. He describes his initial frustration at losing to the blue hair set to even more frustration at not grasping expert game strategies. He learns that in order to bec...more
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Nancy
01/03/08

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in January, 2007
recommended to Nancy by: Gwen Gray
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Nicole
12/24/07

This is a great book for scrabble nerds who understand the orgasmic elation of getting 7 letter bingos on a triple word score, watching with sadistic fervor your score double the points of your opponent. Scrabble is a sub-world of cultural and social norms where the most otherwise awkward, less than average weirdos become more than accepted, they become glorified champions. And now thanks to this book and the subsequent documentaries that followed, scrabble is now covered by ESPN. It has risen...more
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Margaret
Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in April, 2008
I feel a bit guilty listing this as "read," because I really only read the first third or so. I just couldn't get into it...I don't know if I'm just too distracted by life at the moment since I had a very similar criticism about another book that I was just reading, but I almost had to keep forcing myself to give this a try. Maybe I expected the real-life characters to be more likeable, kind-of like the documentary version of competitive Scrabble, Word Play. Anyhoo, I would love to ...more
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meg
05/20/07

bookshelves: nonfiction
Read in January, 2007
recommends it for: scrabble lovers, but only the ones who are in it for the points
hmm. i was fully expecting to love this book, but i had to stop a few chapters in. there was some interesting views into the world of competitive scrabble and portraits of its motely competitors, but i was bugged by the emphasis of points over love of new and interesting words. so much of it is about memorization and winning tactics, which, i guess is what the competition part is all about... but it just made me want to go play scrabble for fun instead of reading about all the people who take it...more
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Jesse
09/26/07

Read in January, 2003
recommends it for: everyone.
This book wins. What can you possibly learn about life from people who obessively play scrabble as their hobby and sometimes as their default profession? Quite a lot - about passion, about friendships between people - about being intensely devoted to something because you love it, not because it's popular or because others understand it. And the best part about it is you even start to catch a bit of enthusasm for playing scrabble! Read it. You'll like it.
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Jenna
01/06/09

Read in January, 2009
I finished this book over the course of the first two weeks of my second daughter's life. It was good late night feeding material. I didn't expect to get into it too much - my friend Mel recommended it but confessed to skimming and skipping some of the more detailed analysis of the game. But, self confessed geek that I am, I was drawn into the saga of the allure of the game, and compelled to finish the book because of the psychology of addiction revealed. Some may find this book boring and fraug...more
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Judith
12/09/08

I don't know if this book is related to the movie, "Word Wars", but it seemed very much like it. You have to love Scrabble or some variation of it to enjoy this book, and I do. And then you have to understand that this is not a book you can read uninterrupted or on a plane for entertainment. It is very dense and very word-intensive, but the author is serious and self-mocking at the same time, so he sets a good tone for the book. I learned some new things about Scrabble, and one of ...more
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Shane
12/31/08

bookshelves: non-fiction, unowned-and-read
Read in December, 2008
In Word Freak, Stefan Fatsis documents his journey into the world of competitive Scrabble in a surprisingly engaging and enjoyable way. I'll admit I'm a bit biased, in that I have been playing scrabble since I was a kid, but even a Scrabble newbie will likely find Fatsis' narrative insightful and clever. He writes about the game, the players, and his personal development with equal skill, which makes Word Freak quite the page turner. It's an engaging look into a unique group of people and a fasc...more
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Jeremy
01/07/09

Read in December, 2008
Misfit genuises with highly anti-social disfunctions brought together by a combination of love of language, love of competition and not a whole hell of a lot else to do with all of the free time that comes from not working, having families or sleeping regularly. These are the folks for whom Marx said that he wouldn't want to be part of any club who would accept someone like him. Yeah, the other Marx. Pleasant read. Not as compelling as A Few Seconds of Panic. Makes me want to play a ...more
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Lea
08/30/08

bookshelves: memoir
I believe that Stefan Fatsis is a sportswriter for the Wall Street Journal, and I hear him regularly speaking about sports on NPR, so I was a bit surprised to discover that he is also a fanatical Scrabble player. As a would-be Scrabble fanatic (if I had more time I would surely be a full-fledged one), I was drawn to the very notion of competitive Scrabble playing, and the deeper I got into this book the more I felt like I had entered an alternate universe populated by eccentric individuals who d...more
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Bill
07/13/08

Read in July, 2008
recommends it for: Word Freaks
Who knew a book about the tournament Scrabble scene could be so interesting? I stumbled across this one at the bookstore a couple weeks ago. It caught my eye because the title "Word Freak" is spelled down the spine in distinctive wooden Scrabble tiles. I have always been a Scrabble fan, but only started playing the game again recently (it was the sole reason I initially signed up for a Facebook account). I sat down and read the intro and the first chapter while my 2-year-old played...more
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John
06/02/08

Disclaimer: I love words. I have competed in spelling bees, I have a degree in Linguistics, and I love word games like Scrabble and Boggle. So it was, I imagine, completely predictable that I would thoroughly enjoy this book (that would explain why someone gave it to me :-).

That said, I am sure Word Freak would appeal to many people who have even a passing interest in either words or subcultures. The subtitle is "Heartbreak, Triumph, Genius, and Obsession in the World of Competitive SC...more
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Trevor
05/09/08

First of all I saw a film called "Word Wars" which quickly became one of my favourite documentaries of all time and then a friend of mine at work lent me this book - and if you haven't read this or seen the film they are probably priorities.

This is the sort of book that allows you to say to yourself, "Gosh, truth really is stranger than fiction." Or perhaps, "It really does take all sorts to make the world". Either way, one is stuck with cliches.

I've neve...more
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heather
Read in December, 2007
recommends it for: the living room player of Scrabble
This book is about the obsessive and also likely for the Scrabble obsessive. If you get a kick out of anagrams and triple letter scores, you'll enjoy most of this book. You get play by plays, in depth personal info on the top Scrabble players in the nation (and world), tips and hints, separation of good and phony word plays. It's amazing to see some of the point scores they get. I'm talking triple digits on one play.

The only negative part of the book is that towards the end Fatsis gets uber ...more
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Naomi
07/30/08

bookshelves: didnt-finish, on-my-bookshelf
Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in July, 2008
recommends it for: word nerds, Scrabble players, people who like to read play-by-play accounts of tournaments
7/8/08: Well, I quit this book to read another, more entertaining one - my ever favorite format, The Novel. But now I have finished the other and so I'm back to this book. Because I'm not a quitter! And the "characters" are starting to grow on me (they are actually profiles of real, live people, not fictitious characters). Also, I now desperately want to own a Scrabble dictionary and/or play Scrabble in the park with eccentric people. So, even though I don't think this is an improvemen...more
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Lucy
07/26/07

i really liked the documentary about the competitive scrabble world, which mostly covered the same players, but this book was so much better. it almost made me want to devote all the time i currently waste procrastinating to memorising lists of words. somehow it seems easier to become obsessed with a fairly pointless goal, like scrabble, rather than anything more productive, like my research. the best parts of this book are the characters, those people for whom scrabble validates their existence...more
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Jacob
02/10/08

Read in March, 2008
I'm really enjoying this book and I'm only half-way through! It's by a journalist who wanted to report on the world of competitive Scrabble, but got sucked into it himself. So it's half reporting, half memoir. He tells the stories about the characters (and I do mean characters) that he meets in this world, but he intersperses it with linguistic wordplay; trivia about Scrabble and words and wordplay; some of the amazing plays and games; the history of Scrabble, and games in general in America; is...more
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lana
09/01/07

This is a book about competitive scrabble and the people that play it. The author became an obsessive player himself, and so the book is at times dry to the non-initiate. The players are bizarre and competitive scrabble bears almost no relation to the living-room version of the game. It is a strange subculture indeed, and the book gives a history of the game and tons of scrabble words and strategy along with its portraits of the players. To quote from the back of the book: "...stars range f...more
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Word Freak: Heartbreak, Triumph, Genius, and Obsession in the World of Competitive Scrabble Players (Paperback)
Word Freak: Heartbreak, Triumph, Genius, and Obsession in the World of Competitive Scrabble Players (Hardcover)
Word Freak: A Journey into the Eccentric World of the Most Obsessive Board Game Ever Invented (Hardcover)
Word Freak (Paperback)