Wright appears to have worked on the manuscript for several years. Though its official publication date is 1939, references in newspaper humor columns are made to his manuscript of a book without an "e" years earlier. Prior to publication, he occasionally referred to his manuscript as
Champion of Youth. In October 1930, while Wright was living near
Tampa, Florida, he wrote a letter to
The Evening Independent newspaper, boasted that he had written a fine lipogrammatic work, and suggested the paper hold a lipogram competition, with $250 for the winner. The paper turned him down. Wright struggled to find a publisher for the book, and eventually used Wetzel Publishing Co., a
self-publishing press. A 2007 post on the
Bookride blog about rare books says a warehouse holding copies of
Gadsby burned shortly after the book was printed, destroying "most copies of the ill fated novel". The blog post says the book was never reviewed "and only kept alive by the efforts of a few avant garde French intellos and assorted connoisseurs of the odd, weird and zany". The book's scarcity and oddness has seen original copies priced at $4,000 to $7,500 by book dealers. Wright died the same year of publication, 1939. In 1937, Wright said writing the book was a challenge and the author of an article on his efforts in
The Oshkosh Daily recommended composing lipograms for
insomnia sufferers.Wright said in his introduction to
Gadsby that "this story was written, not through any attempt to attain literary merit, but due to a somewhat balky nature, caused by hearing it so constantly claimed that 'it can't be done'". He said he tied down the "e" key on his typewriter while completing the final manuscript. "This was done so that none of that vowel might slip in, accidentally; and many did try to do so!" And in fact, the 1939 printing by the Wetzel Publishing Co. contains four such slips: the word "the" on pages 51, 103 and 124, and the word "officers" on page 213. ==Reception and influence==