jenny@ucbvax.UUCP (Kathryn Hargreaves) (08/13/84)
My absolute favorite is _Revising Prose_ by Richard A. Lanham, 1979, Charles Scribner's Sons. Elvira
mcrk@pyuxo.UUCP (C Koster) (08/14/84)
Don't forget "Strunk & White" or "Harbrace." (Say, are those spelled correctly? Look it up!)
anne@digi-g.UUCP (Anne Chenette) (08/24/84)
(Forgive me for any typos in this message - the postnews editor hates me) My favorite usage book for reading is "Modern English Usage" by Fowler. It has kept me happy for many a quiet hour. Lately, I've been reading "The Careful Writer: A Modern Guide to English Usage" by Theodore Bernstein (editor of the The New York Times). It's nicely written, but badly organized. Its worst sin is that it has no index or table of contents; thus, it is useless as a reference book. I've found that this is the case with most of the usage books I've looked at, and that most are the author's personal reflections on a random selection of words, phrases, and established usages, not a guide to correct writing. The one exception I've found is a book entitiled "The Gregg Reference Manual" by William Sabin. It is not a guide to shorthand, but rather the most logical guide to written English that I've seen. It's easy to use if you want to look up a specific point of grammar or usage, as opposed to all the other books - even Strunk and White. It's sitting on my desk (I'm a technical writer), and it's the one thing I would grab if there was a fire here. Has anyone else seen or used this gem of a reference book? Has anyone found another reference manual similar to or better than this one? If so, please let me know. Anne Chenette ihnp4!umn-cs!digi-g!anne
colonel@gloria.UUCP (08/30/84)
[I didn't ought to have went.] I missed the original query, but ... you might look up _The Century Handbook of Writing._ It's out of print, of course. They knew how to write in those days! -- Col. G. L. Sicherman ...seismo!rochester!rocksanne!rocksvax!sunybcs!gloria!colonel