Style: An Anti-Textbook
:
Second Edition, Revised
Richard A. Lanham
Take a Moment and read an excerpt from this book.
Why do so many writing courses, with their earnest handbooks and narrow focus on "clarity," bore students and fail to teach them how to write well? Richard Lanham provides answers, and an antidote, in the seven witty and provocative chapters of Style: An Anti-Textbook.
1. THE PROSE PROBLEM AND "THE BOOKS" 2. THE USES
OF OBSCURITY ¤ 3. THE OPAQUE STYLE ¤ 4. THE DELIGHTS
OF JARGON ¤ 5. POETIC PROSE ¤ 6. ESSENTIAL
HYPOCRACIES ¤ 7. THE ULTIMATE MORALITY OF MIND
A new program, one that emphasizes writing as "pleasure rather than duty" and allows "words to escape from the penalty box and get back to skating" is Lanham's goal with this updated and expanded edition of his classic. The Anti-Textbook is back!
"People seldom write to be clear. They have designs on their fellow men. Pure prose is as rare as pure virtue, and for the same reasons . . . The Books [Lanham's term for misguided Composition textbooks], written for a man and world yet unfallen, depict a ludicrous process like this: 'I have an idea. I want to present this gift to my fellow man. I fix this thought clearly in mind. I follow the rules. Out comes a prose that gift-wraps thought in transparent paper.' If this sounds like a travesty, it's because it is one. Yet it dominates prose instruction in America." —from Chapter 1
"A necessary manual for those interested in the perpetuation, and the possibilities, of good English prose." —Harper's Magazine
"[Lanham's] style is notable for its audacity, liveliness, and grace." —Times Literary Supplement
"The most applicably provocative book on the subject of prose style available. Imperative reading for all teachers and students of writing." —Choice
Richard A. Lanham is professor emeritus of English at the University of California, Los Angeles and president of Rhetorica, Inc., a consulting and editorial services company. He is the author of numerous books on writing, including A Handlist of Rhetorical Terms, Analyzing Prose, The Electronic Word, and most recently, The Economics of Attention.
The Book ShopperMurray Browne
Trade Paper,
224 pp.,
$14.95 |
"Where is human nature so weak as in the bookstore?" —Henry Ward Beecher The Book Shopper is a spirited and witty guide to the world of disheveled used bookstores and dusty basements where shelves sag under the burden of so many books. In the limitless sea of books, here's one that will make you laugh as it helps you find your way to titles and authors . . . [read more] |
The Fiction Editor, the Novel, and the NovelistThomas McCormack
Trade Paper,
167 pp.,
$12.00 |
Retail: $14.95. BACKLIST SALE PRICE $12.00 Drawing upon 28 years of experience as the CEO and Editorial Director of St. Martin's Press, Thomas McCormack gives practical guidance about how to plan, write, and revise a novel. A standard reference for editors since its first publication in 1988, The Fiction Editor has also become popular with writers beca . . . [read more] |
Shakespeare's Use of the Arts of LanguageSister Miriam JosephNow available in paperback
Hardcover,
423 pp.,
$34.95 |
Grammar-school students in Shakespeare's time were taught to recognize the two hundred figures of speech that Renaissance scholars had derived from Latin and Greek sources (from amphibologia through onomatopoeia to zeugma). This knowledge was one element in their thorough grounding in the liberal arts of logic, grammar, and rhetoric, known as the trivium. In Shakespeare's Use of the Arts of . . . [read more] |
So Many BooksGabriel ZaidTranslated from the Spanish by Natasha Wimmer
Trade Paper,
144 pp.,
$12.00 |
"Reading liberates the reader and transports him from his book to a reading of himself and all of life. It leads him to participate in conversations, and in some cases to arrange them . . . It could even be said that to publish a book is to insert it into the middle of a conversation." —from So Many Books Join the conversation! In So Many Books, Gabriel . . . [read more] |
The TriviumSister Miriam JosephEdited by Marguerite McGlinn
Trade Paper,
292 pp.,
$18.95 |
The Trivium guides the reader through a clarifying and rigorous account of logic, grammar, and rhetoric. A thorough presentation of general grammar, propositions, syllogisms, enthymemes, fallacies, poetics, figurative language, and metrical discourse — accompanied by lucid graphics and enlivened by examples from Shakespeare, Milton, Plato, and others — makes The Trivium . . . [read more] |




