[An] incisive, bold, and passionate reclamation of language . . . Each entry in [Freeman's] dictionary . . . is a perceptive and rousing assessment of various aspects of the raging 'information war' and what it's doing to us and what we can do to counter it. The result, gracefully punctuated with an afterword by MacArthur fellow Valeria Luiselli, is an incandescent and galvanizing protest and call for awareness and action.
–DONNA SEAMAN, Booklist
"[John Freeman] offers an alphabet of hope and action in this spare, eloquent meditation . . . The representative words, including resonant headings such as citizen, justice, and rage, introduce extended definitions that are sobering, probing, and precise . . . A protest, a poem, and a plea, Freeman's utterly original manifesto is a pocket manual for informed political dissent and a must-read for all thinking citizens." –
Publishers Weekly (starred review)
Poet and editor, John Freeman, has created a work of both artistry and activism in
Dictionary of the Undoing, a lexicon of what should matter from A to Z–a complex and nuanced rebirthing of words that have been worn away by the strife and noise of this era. –
WALTER MOSLEY "All [of John Freeman's] projects feel like an invitation to enter into a polyphonic, multi-voiced conversation with other minds.
Dictionary of the Undoing is no different. It is a book that makes you think, then rethink. It invites you to engage with it, to refute it, to contribute to it." –
VALERIA LUISELLI "How to be good in bad times? How to speak truth? Why read? Why write? Why bother? It is a symptom of our ongoing catastrophe that such questions must be asked, but we're lucky that John Freeman is out there looking for some answers. Language is Freeman's primary concern, and in
Dictionary of the Undoing he sets out to reclaim it and restore what was damaged by an onslaught of evil and idiocy. One day you might be asked what you were reading in 2019, when everything seemed to be coming apart, and you're going to want to say John Freeman's
Dictionary of the Undoing." –
ALEKSANDAR HEMON