The Elements of Style
This week I started reading The Elements of Style by William Strunk Jr. and E.B. White. I bought it at the MU bookstore “just-for-fun” a while ago to gain a better knowledge of grammar and sentence structure. Most students probably would read this kind of book only if required. But as a journalist, I understand the power of the written word, and that a mastery of the English language gives further force to a story. It’s a small book–only about the size of my hand –with a neutral gray cover and fewer than 100 pages, but over the past 50 years it’s been praised.
“Buy it, study it, enjoy it,” says a review for by the New York Times. “It’s as timeless as a book can be in our age of volubility.”
As I prepare for working on the copy desk at the Columbia Missourian next semester, I want to know as I can, so I can enhance each writer’s story rather than hinder it. I’ll know to “keep related words together” (rule 20) and to “place the emphatic words of a sentence at the end” (rule 22). I did pretty well last spring in my copy editing class, but there is always more to learn.
Knowing the inner workings of language won’t just help me as a copy editor, but as a writer, which is ultimately toward what I aspire. I want to write in a way that makes “every word tell.”
Other grammar books on my list for the upcoming semester:
-The Elephants of Style, by Bill Walsh
-Lapsing into a Comma, by Bill Walsh
-Sin and Syntax, by Constance Hale
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