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・ Ella Mae Johnson
・ Ella Mae Lentz
・ Ella Mae Morse
・ Ella Mae Wiggins
・ Ella Mahalla Cutter Sterling House
・ Ella Maillart
・ Ella Mary Edghill
・ Ella Mary Leather
・ Ella Masar
・ Ella Mastrantonio
・ Ella Matteucci
・ Ella May Saison
・ Ella McSweeney
・ Ella Me Levantó
・ Ella Milch-Sheriff
Ella Minnow Pea
・ Ella Mitchell
・ Ella Morris
・ Ella Moss
・ Ella Naper
・ Ella Negruzzi
・ Ella Nelson
・ Ella Nicholas
・ Ella no es ella
・ Ella Némethy
・ Ella O'Neill
・ Ella Orr Campbell
・ Ella P. Stewart
・ Ella Pamfilova
・ Ella Pardy


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Ella Minnow Pea : ウィキペディア英語版
Ella Minnow Pea

''Ella Minnow Pea'' is a 2001 novel by Mark Dunn. The full title of the hardcover version is ''Ella Minnow Pea: a progressively lipogrammatic epistolary fable'', while the paperback version is titled ''Ella Minnow Pea: A Novel Without Letters''.
==Plot summary==
The plot is conveyed through mail or notes sent between various characters, though with the banned letters missing, creating passages that become more and more phonetically or creatively spelled, and requiring more effort to interpret.
The novel is set on the fictitious island of Nollop, off the coast of South Carolina, which is home to Nevin Nollop, the supposed creator of the well-known pangram "The quick brown fox jumps over a lazy dog." This sentence is preserved on a memorial statue to its creator on the island and is taken very seriously by the government of the island. Throughout the book, tiles containing the letters fall from the inscription beneath the statue, and as each one does, the island's government bans the contained letter's use from written or spoken communication. A penalty system is enforced for using the forbidden characters, with public censure for a first offense, lashing or stocks (violator's choice) upon a second offense and banishment from the island nation upon the third. By the end of the novel, most of the island's inhabitants have either been banished or have left of their own accord.
The island's high council becomes more and more nonsensical as time progresses and the alphabet diminishes, promoting Nollop to divine status. Uncompromising in their enforcement of Nollop's "divine will", they offer only one hope to the frustrated islanders: to disprove Nollop's omniscience by finding a pangram of 32 letters (in contrast to Nollop's 35, or just 33 in the version "A quick brown..."). With this goal in mind "Enterprise 32" is started, a project involving many of the novel's main characters. With but five characters left (L, M, N, O, and P), the elusive phrase is eventually discovered by Ella in one of her father's earlier letters: "Pack my box with five dozen liquor jugs," which has only 32 letters. The council accepts this and restores the right to all 26 letters to the populace.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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