Review:
Freeman, with her extensive explanations, comes off as the more practical and knowledgeable, but much of Bierce's greatness lies in his biting, snooty formulations. 'Ancestrally vulgar, ' he'll sniff about one word, rolling his eyes or 'irreclaimably degenerate.' What fun!--Deirdre Foley-Mendelssohn, "Book Bench," The New Yorker" [Bierce] defended what he took to be elite usages; he detested vernacular variants, and he had a special animus against expressions with a whiff of business and commerce ("trade") about them. Some of his peeves -- expressed in High Curmudgeon--were conventional ones at the time, but many were eccentric to the point of idiosyncrasy, and on these the Bierce-Freeman exchanges are especially delightful.--Linguist Arnold Zwicky, "Language Log" A hundred years ago, knuckle-rapper Ambrose Bierce cranked out a compendium of usage rules: "Write It Right." Now Jan Freeman, language columnist for the Boston Globe, has published an annotated version of Bierce's bugbears: "Ambrose Bierce's Write It Right." You'll savor Freeman's bright and breezy commentary on Bierce's often daffy dicta.--Rob Kyffe, "The Word Guy" "When the wisest language maven of this century takes on the wittiest (and most curmudgeonly) of the last one, the result is fantastically entertaining and insightful. You can dip into this book for pleasure, but you will also learn much about language, style, and the dubious authority of self-anointed experts."--Steven Pinker, Harvard College Professor of Psychology, Harvard University, and author of "The Language Instinct" and "The Stuff of Thought." "What fun to see an exceptionally commonsensical modern language critic give a famously crusty old one his due! They should sell tickets." --Barbara Wallraff, author of "Word Court" "There is much to admire in this little book: the thoroughness of Ms. Freeman's research, her level-headed analysis of Bierce's strictures, and -- perhaps the enduring lesson -- her insight into the foibles of usagists. If you as an editor or manager have the authority to set yourself up as a tinpot despot on usage (as I was for many years), put this book before you and learn humility."--John McIntyre, "You Don't Say" "Freeman, with her extensive explanations, comes off as the more practical and knowledgeable, but much of Bierce's greatness lies in his biting, snooty formulations. 'Ancestrally vulgar, ' he'll sniff about one word, rolling his eyes ... or 'irreclaimably degenerate.' What fun!" --Deirdre Foley-Mendelssohn, "Book Bench," "The New Yorker" "[Bierce] defended what he took to be elite usages; he detested vernacular variants, and he had a special animus against expressions with a whiff of business and commerce ("trade") about them. Some of his peeves -- expressed in High Curmudgeon -- were conventional ones at the time, but many were eccentric to the point of idiosyncrasy, and on these the Bierce-Freeman exchanges are especially delightful.--Linguist Arnold Zwicky, "Language Log" "A hundred years ago, knuckle-rapper Ambrose Bierce cranked out a compendium of usage rules: "Write It Right." Now Jan Freeman, language columnist for
About the Author:
Jan Freeman has worked as an editor at The Real Paper, an alternative weekly; at Boston and Inc. magazines; and at the Boston Globe, where she was a science news editor when she launched "The Word," her weekly column on English usage, in 1997. She lives in Auburndale, Massachusetts.
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