Ammon Shea is an American writer, known for his nonfiction books about the English language. With Peter Novobatzky, he wrote Depraved English (1999) and Insulting English (2001), which both highlight obscure and unusual English words. Shea later read the entire Oxford English Dictionary, and documented his observations in Reading the OED: One Man, One Year, 21,730 Pages (2008).[1][2] He was subsequently hired to work at Oxford University Press as a consulting editor of American dictionaries. Shea has also contributed to the "On Language" column in Sunday's New York Times.[3] Shea's most recent full-length work is The Phone Book: The Curious History of the Book That Everyone Uses But No One Reads (2010).[4]
A dictionary collector, Shea had already read Webster's Second International Dictionary in the 1990s.[5] Throughout his life, he has worked as a gondolier, a mover, and a busker.[6]