If you’re an aspiring author, this is all the advice you need.
The original edition The Elements of Style was written as a textbook in 1918 by English professor Will Strunk, Jr. It was revised, added to and published by one of his students, E.B. White, and has yet to go out of print. White, you will remember, is also the author of Charlotte’s Web, as well as The Letters of E.B. White, the wisest and wittiest collection of not-so-private correspondence ever bound between two covers. One example:
I can only assume that your editorial writer tripped over the First Amendment and thought it was the office cat.
But back to The Elements of Style. The book is easily navigated, six chapters including one on style and another on spelling, with a glossary and an index in back. I reread The Elements of Style every two or three years, cover to cover, just to remind myself what’s what in my world. I confess, I’m always looking up “lay” and “lie” [page 77, “Do not misuse lay for lie. The hen, or the play, lays an egg; the llama lies down.”], an eternal bone of contention between Everywriter and The Copyeditor.
Part of the delight of this book [Grammar? Delightful? Am I kidding you? No.] lies [lays?] in its [no apostrophe] examples, as here:
“Being in a dilapidated condition, I was able to buy the house very cheap” demonstrating the incorrect usage of participial phrase and subject.
I don’t know about you, but I always buy houses when I’m in a dilapidated condition myself.
Chapter 4, “Words and Expressions Commonly Misused,” is my first stop when I stub my toe on Something Everyone Says, so it has to be right. Right? Wrong. Strunk and White are united in the less is more view of style. Don’t pad, don’t label, don’t invent verbs by adding -ize to a noun, however tempting it may be. That way lies [lays?] abomination.
I’ve worn out three or four paperback editions of Strunk and White’s The Elements of Style since being introduced to it by Mr. Winklebleck, my high school freshman English teacher. I broke down and bought Maira Kalman’s illustrated edition when it came out in hardcover in 2005. And then there’s the 50th Anniversary Edition, gilt lettered and black leather bound, which might be the one thing I’d like to be buried with. [with which I’d like to be buried?]
#thiswritinglife Chatter Strunk and White The Elements of Style writing resources
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2 Comments Leave a comment ›
I laughed, reading this one. I love that book. I’ve given at least a dozen copies over the years to students, young writers and friends in grad school. It’s indispensable! Thanks for reminding me that it’s also amusing.
Lovelovelove E.B. White.