Words Fail Me: What Everyone Who Writes Should Know about Writing

by Patricia T. O'Conner

Hardcover, 1999

Status

Available

Call number

ENG B.200

Publication

Harcourt Brace & Company

Pages

230

Description

Armed with our laptops and our PCs, we're the writing-est generation ever, cranking out e-mail, Web pages, and blogs, not to mention office memos, faxes, reports, newsletters, school papers, even memoirs and novels. But many of us were never taught how to write a sentence that makes sense, how to make sure our words do justice to our ideas. The result? Never have so many written so much so badly. O'Conner comes to the rescue with a practical and witty guide to the elements of good writing--From publisher description.

Description

A fun, focused guide to making words work for you


Whether you are working on the novel that's been in the back of your mind for years or simply facing an increasing demand to write well at work or school, the fact remains: we all write more often these days, be it reports, e-mails, blog posts, or texts. But despite the increase in written communication, the fundamentals of good writing have been lost. Grammar maven Patricia T. O'Conner comes to the rescue with the most painless, practical, and funny writing book ever written. In short, snappy chapters filled with crystal-clear examples, amusing comparisons, and humorous allegories that cover everything from "Pronoun Pileups" and "Verbs That Zing" to "What to Do When You're Stuck," O'Conner provides simple, straightforward tips to help you sort through your thoughts and make your sentences strong.

Collection

Barcode

4068

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

230 p.; 8.25 inches

ISBN

0151003718 / 9780151003716

Lexile

930L

User reviews

LibraryThing member ljhliesl
Yes, yes they did.

Rating

½ (46 ratings; 3.8)

Call number

ENG B.200
Page: 0.3069 seconds