Louis Beside Himself

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Louis Beside Himself Page 19

by Anna Fienberg


  Very bad, like a blackguard

  INTACT

  All of a piece, nothing missing Whole, complete

  Intractable

  Difficult to manage or manoeuvre

  Stubborn as anything

  INTREPID

  Courageous

  Fearless, undaunted, incredibly brave

  IRONIC

  The use of words or actions to show the opposite of their meaning

  Humorous, clever

  IRREPLACEABLE

  Unable to be replaced or substituted

  Crucial, indispensable

  LA CERATED

  Torn; distressed deeply; cut with jagged edges (words can lacerate, too)

  Mangled, wounded

  LITERALLY

  To uphold the true meaning of a word

  Really, actually

  LUGUBRIOUS

  Mournful, from the Latin lugubri(s), (says Elena)

  Doleful, gloomy

  MALLEE BULL

  Extremely strong and fit, to survive the dry country of the Mallee in Victoria

  MANGY

  Of shabby appearance; full of bare spots

  Wretched, squalid

  MOROSELY

  In a melancholy way

  Sullenly, gloomily

  NONCHALANT

  Seemingly unconcerned; having a donft.care attitude

  Casually indifferent

  OMINOUS

  An omen or sign, menacing

  Portentous, threatening

  PERIL

  Imminent terrible danger, serious risk!

  PERPLEXITIES

  Things that puzzle, or are very complicated or intricate

  Puzzlements, intricacies

  PIQUANT

  Pleasantly disturbing taste or odour

  Spicy, pungent

  PONDERING

  Considering carefully

  Thinking over, weighing up

  PUNGENT

  Sharp, biting taste or smell; pointed, penetrating comment

  Acrid, caustic

  REMOTEST

  Furthest away

  Isolated, distant

  REVERIE

  Lost in thought

  Trance, daydream

  RIGOR MORTIS

  Muscles going stiff and rigid after death

  ROBUST

  Strong, healthy, well.developed

  RUEFULLY

  Expressing sadness or regret; often with a faintly sardonic, bitter kind of compassion

  Wryly

  SARDONICALLY

  Scornfully, mockingly, influenced by the Latin herba Sardonia ‘Sardinian herb’, a poisonous plant that distorts the face of the eater (says Elena, who was told by her Aunty Maria from Sardinia)

  Cynically, sarcastically

  SCABROUS

  Rough to the touch, not very nice, a bit rude

  Knotty, yucky

  SINISTER

  Suggesting an evil force or motive; from the Latin, meaning on the left, which was thought to be unlucky in the old days, (says Elena)

  Malign, dire (rhymes with wire), ominous

  STAGNATE

  Stop moving or flowing; lie inactive for ages; become stale, lose energy

  STATISTICS

  The collection, organisation and interpretation of numerical data

  SUBLIME

  Majestic, something of extremely high worth

  Awesome, grand, supreme, noble, exquisite!

  TA NTALISING

  Teasing or tormenting by giving a glimpse of something appealing but keeping it out of reach

  TERRESTRIAL

  Of the earth or its inhabitants as opposed to something heavenly

  Earthly, mundane

  THYME

  An aromatic herb from the genus

  Thymus, often used for seasoning

  TRANSFIGURED

  Figure or appearance changed

  Transformed, altered

  TRANSLUCENT

  Allowing light to shine through but blurring, making images indistinct

  TUMULTUOUS

  Noisy and disorderly

  Riotous

  VA LIANTLY

  Acting with valour or stout heart Bravely, courageous (Compiled with assistance from The Heritage Illustrated Dictionary and Elena Spezia)

  ANNA FIENBERGbegan writing stories when she was only eight years old. She says: ‘I’ve always had a passion for words. I used to collect them, like some people collect stamps. Certain words gave me a special, billionaire feeling, and when uttered, seemed to have a magical effect. But it was my son and his passion for wrestling that gave me the idea for this book. He and his friends spent hours trying to roll their eyeballs up into their heads, poking out their tongues and scowling like the wrestling star, The Undertaker. They folded each other over like envelopes, pounded, leaped on, crashed into, headlocked, and jumped over each other. The noise from the other end of the house was sometimes so alarming.

  ‘One thing I noticed as I was growing up was that it was good to have a passion of your own, but lonely if no one else shared it. Words were the perfect passion to have, though, because eventually, if you figured out how to use them in the right way, you could share what you cared about most. And when you read other people’s words you could go inside their minds and understand what they cared about most. What I love about books is that they tell you what everyone is thinking, but not saying.

  ‘It was C S Lewis, author of The Chronicles of Narnia, who said, “We read so as not to be alone.” Those wonderful books of his, and all the myriad of others I’ve read in my life have always been such rich company. I hope when you pick up Louis Beside Himself that you’ll find that sort of company, too.’

  Anna Fienberg has written picture books, junior novels and fiction for teenagers and adults. Her books include the popular Tashi series, The Witch in the Lake, Number 8 and Horrendo’s Curse, which was an Honour Book in the 2003 CBCA awards.

 

 

 


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