Gadsby is a civic-minded novel chronicling how John Gadsby marshals the youth of Branton Hills to revive a sleepy American town, culminating in his election as mayor. Its most audacious feature is formal: a 50,000-word lipogram that entirely omits the letter 'e', forcing a prose of periphrasis, inventive synonymy, and syntactic detours. The result is a curious blend of boosterish municipal narrative and stringent linguistic experiment, a precursor to later constraint-based poetics associated with Oulipo, yet rooted in 1930s American optimism about voluntarism, education, and local government. Ernest Vincent Wright, an American writer dedicated to proving the pliancy of English, reportedly disabled the 'e' key on his typewriter to police his constraint. Working outside mainstream publishing and dying in the year of the book's appearance (1939), he fashioned Gadsby as both tour de force and rejoinder to skeptics who deemed such a feat impossible. His painstaking circumventions, coinages, and occasional archaisms reveal a craftsman engrossed by form, pedagogy, and civic rhetoric, more concerned with linguistic demonstration than psychological inwardness. Readers of experimental fiction, linguistics enthusiasts, and students of American civic culture will find Gadsby indispensable: an improbable constraint that becomes a luminous lesson in possibility. Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the author's voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readable-distilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.