ABOUT THE ELEMENTS OF STYLE: UPDATED FOR PRESENT-DAY USE "The
ancients wrote at a time when the great art of writing badly had
not yet been invented. In those days to write at all meant to write
well." - Georg Christoph Lichtenberg. I was originally born in
Ohio.... Well, that's interesting, I thought, as I absentmindedly
listened to the sports announcer on the radio. Wait STOP "I was
ORIGINALLY BORN IN OHIO..."? Well, gosh. Where were you born after
THAT? Then there are the baseball commentators who routinely say
things like: "If he makes that play, the run may not have scored."
Well, again, wait just a minute. "If he MAKES that play...." But
the play is already over. Why is the sentence in the present tense?
..".The run may not have scored." But it DID score, so in this
case, the proper word is "might," "MIGHT not have scored." A
baseball announcer with any feeling for elementary good grammar
would have said: "If he had made that play, the run might not have
scored." Oh, and then there are little niceties like this: "If I'm
the Dallas Cowboys, I gotta believe...." But you AREN'T the Dallas
Cowboys, and besides, how could one person be an entire football
organization? Okay, okay, sports broadcasters are easy to pick on
(though one wonders why sports announcers, who are paid to speak,
can't speak clearly, grammatically, and well). The problem is --
and it's the problem squarely confronted in this book -- that such
loose, breezy, and ungrammatical language is epidemic in print,
too. Newspapers and magazines are full of cliches and buzzwords,
and there's not one writer in ten who understands that difference
between "lay" and "lie." If you have a friend who goes duck
hunting, and s/he gives you a bunch of down, you might want to LAY
the down on your mattress. Similarly, you LAY turf in the yard, or
LAY bricks in the patio. But when you take to your bed for a nap,
you LIE down. (The issue is clarified in this book.) Language,
whether spoken or written, is like a game, and like all games, it
has rules. Now, "rules" does not have to be a scary word, and we
all know that in language, the rules are constantly changing.
"Ain't" was once a fairly common, and unremarkable, word, but
nowadays, the President cannot use "ain't" in a State of the Union
address; that's just the way the game is currently played.
Furthermore, we judge language, whether spoken or written, by how
well it accomplishes its ends within the agreed-upon rules. (On the
subject of games without rules, Robert Frost said, apropos free
verse: "I would as soon play tennis with the net down.") There are
many rules, formal and informal, and many little distinctions, to
be learned, in language, and the author considers it fun, rather
than a chore, to learn them. What is the difference between "loath"
and "loathe"? When do we use "who," and when do we use "whom"? What
is a gerund, what is apposition? These, and many other niceties of
language, are investigated and explained in this updating of
William Strunk, Jr.'s classic work. The book is based on Strunk's
original text of 1918, which he wrote for the use of his students
at Cornell University; it proved to be a landmark. The book was
revised and expanded by E.B. White, of New Yorker fame, in 1959,
but it has had no significant update since 1979. And since that
time, many little affronts (for some of us, insults) to the eye and
ear have gotten into the language. So here is a new edition of
Strunk's classic work, with many of his rules and pronouncements
expanded and explained; with new sections on proper usage and
correct spelling; and even a "Rogue's Gallery" comprised of samples
of egregious writing culled from current newspapers and magazines.
For anyone who will reflect on it, language is an ongoing,
fascinating adventure. The author intends this book to make that
adventure more rewarding, and more enjoyable. Oh. The difference
between "dryer" and "drier"? That, like so much else, is in the bo
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!