Who Wrote No Failure In His Dictionary And When Was It Published?

2025-10-17 00:05:59 176
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3 Answers

Paisley
Paisley
2025-10-19 09:31:53
Short and to the point: I don’t have a confirmed author or publication date for 'No Failure in His Dictionary' in my records — it doesn’t show up as a clearly catalogued standalone book. In practice that usually means the phrase is from a periodical piece, a translated title, or an obscure print that hasn’t been widely cataloged.

If it matters for citation, the quickest routes are library catalogs (WorldCat), Google Books, and historical newspaper databases; searching title variants often reveals the true source. I enjoy these little bibliographic puzzles — they always lead me to interesting sidestories and unexpected archives to browse.
Quinn
Quinn
2025-10-19 20:04:35
That phrase jumps out like a headline you'd see in the sports pages or a human-interest magazine back in the day. I searched mentally through common reference points and couldn’t pin a single, well-known book titled 'No Failure in His Dictionary' with an identified author and publication year. That tells me it’s probably an article title, a translated book title, or an obscure self-published work rather than a mainstream published book with broad catalog presence.

I’d approach it by scanning databases that index periodicals and smaller presses — things like old issues of 'Time', 'Life', regional newspapers, or niche biographical compilations. Sometimes the piece becomes a chapter in a larger book or is anthologized under a different name; other times the exact phrase is used as a chapter title rather than the book title itself, which complicates searches. From my experience hunting obscure pieces, patience and trying variations of the title usually pays off. For me, these little mysteries are fun to unravel, so I’d happily spend an afternoon with microfilm and digital archives hunting this down — the phrase has a nice ring to it, too.
Abigail
Abigail
2025-10-20 06:38:44
Curious title — 'No Failure in His Dictionary' sounds like the sort of declarative headline you’d spot in a profile or magazine piece, and I dug through my mental stacks before answering. I couldn’t find a clear record of a widely distributed book with that exact title in the usual bibliographic databases I use mentally (think WorldCat, Google Books, old newspaper archives). That makes me suspect it’s either a translated title, an article headline, or a lesser-known pamphlet rather than a mainstream book with a standard author/publisher entry.

If you’re tracking this down for real, here’s how I’d proceed: check newspaper and magazine archives from the era you think it came from (older sports or business profiles often used that kind of phrasing), search library catalogs with variations like 'No Failure in My Dictionary' or 'Failure Not in His Dictionary', and peek at library special collections if it’s about a local figure. Sometimes titles are altered in translation or in reprints, so cross-checking with quotes from the text can expose the original title and author. I’ve seen similar confusion with vintage magazine features that later get excerpted as mini-collections under slightly different names.

Personally, I love chasing down these oddball titles — the hunt through microfilm and catalog records is oddly satisfying. Even though I don't have a definitive author or publication date for 'No Failure in His Dictionary' offhand, the phrase itself is great fuel for a research rabbit hole, and I'm already picturing the kind of profile piece that would use it.
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