Synopses & Reviews
By the author of the Atlantic Monthly's highly popular column "Word Court," the most engaging grammar guide of our time, with all the authority of
Strunk and White and all the fun of
Woe Is I.
The "Judge Judy of Grammar" was born when the Atlantic Monthly's Barbara Wallraff began answering grammar questions on America Online. This vibrant exchange became the magazine's bimonthly "Word Court," and eventually the bestselling hardcover book, Word Court.
In Word Court, Wallraff moves beyond her column to tackle common and uncommon items, establishing rules for such issues as turns of phrase, slang, name usage, punctuation, and newly coined vocabulary. With true wit, she deliberates and decides on the right path for lovers of language, ranging from classic questions-Is "a historical" or "an historical" correct?-to awkward issues-How long does someone have to be dead before we should all stop calling her "the late"? Should you use "like" or "as"-and when?
The result is a warmly humorous, reassuring, and brilliantly perceptive tour of how and why we speak the way we do.
Synopsis
By the author of "Atlantic Monthly's" highly popular column "Word Court" comes an engaging grammar guide for lovers of language, a national bestseller now in paperback.
About the Author
Barbara Wallraff (right) is a senior editor at the Atlantic Monthly, where she has worked since 1983. She lives in Brookline, Massachusetts.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Introduction, by Francine Prose
Chapter One: Who Cares
Who does care about grammar and usage questions, how much these people care, and why they are right to/
An Aside: Warning
Chapter Two: The Elements of Fashion
Our language is a work in progress, and so we must mistrust the advice of long-established usage guides, alas. Neologisms from birthing to funeralized. What increasing sexual equality and tolerance of a range of differences have meant to English, and a plea for still broader tolerance. How social trends toward informality and specialization impact (ouch!) our language.
An Aside: House Style
Chapter Three: A Grammarian's Dozen
Why you probably know more grammar than you think you do, and why this should please you. A countdown of thirteen common, often misunderstood grammar-related issues, including split infinitives, why I feel well is good grammar and I feel badly is not, ending clauses with prepositions, that versus which, what it is about hopefully, whether Magic are plural in Orlando and Jazz in Utah, what it is about unique, let's keep it between you and me, please and possessive puzzlements of all sorts.
An Aside: Diagramming Sentences
Chapter Four: Say No More
An alphabetical usage guide to often abused, confused, and traduced words, from A vs. An to Zeds and Zeros.
An Aside: Shelf Life (Useful Reference Books)
Chapter Five: Immaterial Questions
Curiosities whose corporeal existence is one way or another in doubt: Questions about words and punctuation which no one has asked. Words that don't exist. Pronunciation issues, invisible on the page. And the mystery of how one expression can manage to say the same thing twice, and whether that's bad or good.
Chapter Six: Wise to the Words
There is, of course, a wily old elephant in whose eye all of the foregoing is but a mote.
Index