Are you interested in the use and a partial history of the comma, apostrophe, semicolon, dash, ellipsis, etc? This is the book for you.

Truss shows how correct punctuation clarifies meaning, with lots of examples (selected to be funny) that show that incorrect punctuation leads to unclear or even incorrect meaning.

Beware, however. Grammarians tend to be bossy persons, and despite Lynne Truss's sense of humor, she is passionately bossy. What saves the book is her own inconsistent use of portions of punctuation. She is also unsound on the subjunctive.

Favorite review: Stephen Poole's from Saturday December 13, 2003, in The Guardian, archived on-line (mid-2004) in http://books.guardian.co.uk/reviews. He closes with:


Some books:

(07.12.2004)

(07.01.2004)

(06.29.2004)


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