Some guy once wrote: "I've never known a woman to be seduced by a book." Obviously, he wasn't thinking of woman writers.
Because all of us, male and female, have been seduced by the Thesaurus.
I use the thesaurus a lot, and I have a sequence of rules for dealing with it.
1) Don't take a word that you don't recognize.
Generally, I use it when I have an idea for a thing, but my word for it is not the best word for that context.
"The difference between the right word and the almost-right word is the difference between lightning and a eelighni9ng bug."
S. Clemens.
So, I go through the words in the same block of the thesaurus until I hit the word that means just what I need there.
2) When breaking the first rule, use a dictionary.
The thesaurus is not a list of synonyms. (English has hardly any synonyms; "home" means something different from what "residence.") A thesaurus is a list of similar ideas.
When I'm writing a historical story and I need a carriage, I look up "carriage" in the thesaurus. It has a list of carriages, and they are different. I can, however, consult 2 dictionaries and get a picture in one and the approximate time that the word came into usage -- which is often the time the vehicle came into usage -- in the OED.
I don't know the differences among a cabriolet, a shay, and a Victoria. The dictionaries do, though.