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[[|Category:Authors|O'Brien, Damian]] [[image:DamianOBrian.JPG|left]] '''THE BOOK''' This isn’t just another history of English, or a catalogue of etymologies. It explores some of the most obvious but unusual features of English, which are also some of the least understood by many of its speakers. These include: * If ''she works'', why not ''she cans'' or ''she mights''?  * Why do patterns like ''drive, drove, driven'' exist?  * Where did the ''l'' in ''could'' come from?  * Why don’t we pronounce ''ght'' in words like ''eight'' and ''bought''?  * How can ''be, is,'' and ''was'' all be parts of one verb?  * If ''goose'', why ''gander''?  * If ''see'', why '''?  * Why does ''one'' sound like it starts with ''w''?  Drawing on sources as diverse as Sanskrit grammatical treatises, the Bible in six ancient languages, an Anglo-Saxon monk’s survey of whelk-farming, Middle English allegory, Winston Churchill’s memoirs, and the lyrics of reggae legend Lee Scratch Perry, ''If Houses, Why Not Mouses?'' is etymology turbocharged and shows that there explanations for virtually everything. Readers who enjoy the unravelling of linguistic mysteries and tangled relationships between languages will find this an invaluable addition to their libraries.  '''THE AUTHOR''' Damian O'Brien was born in Cheshire and grew up in Buckinghamshire. After leaving school he raced cars and taught performance driving at racetracks including Silverstone and Le Mans. Inspired by a biography of Rasputin, he went to Siberia to spend a year in a remote city on the River Ob. On returning to England he read Sanskrit and Ancient Iranian at Oxford University. He then went to Libya, where he was one of the few Europeans living in the Bedouin town of Sirte before the 2011 revolution. From Libya he moved to Saudi Arabia, and he now divides his time between Basra in southern Iraq and Veliko Tarnovo in the mountains of central Bulgaria. He has a Siamese cat called Stanley, acquired in the pet souk in Tripoli.