If at first you don't succeed, stretch to a two-part episode.
--Fons Taddic
|
Sunday, February 21, 1999
References, Part II
Hmmm. I think I am trying to set a record for the most things I've
promised to get back to in this journal at the same time. Or perhaps
it just seems that way. At any rate, it's late, and I'm tired, and
I'm not really in the mood to describe the rest of my reference shelf.
Oh, on second thought, why not? I could do worse.
Continuing from left to right, which, as it happens, is in descending order
of height...
- The Argument Culture, by Deborah Tannen
This probably doesn't belong on my reference shelf, really, but
there's room for it, so why not? Deborah Tannen rules. She's a linguist
who writes wonderfully readable books about language issues that affect
real people in everyday life. In this book, she looks at the way our
society has gotten increasingly argumentive, with real dialogue being
replaced by debates in which neither side really listens to the other.
- The American Language (4th Ed.), by H.L. Mencken
I got it at a used book store, cheap, and have occasionally referred to
it, but I've never really gotten around to reading it. More's the pity.
- The Random House Handbook, by Frederick Crews
I picked this up -- along with Wasson's Subject and Structure (7th
Ed.) -- free from somebody in the English Dept., who was giving them
away. They may come in handy, I imagine, but I've only barely glanced at
either so far.
- The Norton Anthology of Poetry
Technically belongs on my Literature shelf, I suppose, but that one
floweth over. I got this for English 140: Introduction to Poetry. It's
a pretty decent anthology.
- How Does a Poem Mean?, by Ciardi and Williams
I love the start of this book. I've never quite finished it, though.
- The Random House Writing Course for ESL Students, by Tucker
and Costello
A truly great book, which covers some issues affecting ESL students that
most other texts ignore altogether, such as the rules affecting the use
of articles (a, an, the). I got it when I was a Team Teacher in a
remedial composition course primarily comprised of ESL students. We
weren't using it in the course, but I found it to be useful enough that
it was worth buying.
- Frumspeak: The First Dictionary of Yeshivish, by Chaim M.
Weiser
A brilliant book, which works on more than one level. You could take it
as being a lighthearted look at the jargon that pervades the Yeshiva
(Orthodox Jewish religious academy) world, or you could take it as an
actual, well-researched dictionary of a linguistic phenomenon, the nature
of which is discussed in a scholarly essay at the beginning. Fact is, it's
both, although mostly the latter.
- A Pocket Style Manual (2nd Ed.), by Diana Hacker
Hacker's guides are the standard reference in a whole lot of English
courses at my college. This one fits in one's pocket, and is pretty
useful, covering a bunch of grammatical issues, and MLA format.
- Rhyme's Reason, by John Hollander
A wonderful book, which describes various poetic forms while using those
forms itself. This is a book I might have written, given some more time.
Too bad I've been beaten to it... but it's very, very good. Here's a
quick sample:
Lord Byron, seeking a verse to dally in
While roaming through Don Juan, came to see
The point of imitating the Italian
Poets back in the sixteeth century:
Don Juan's stanza, jumping like a stallion,
Over its disyllabic rhymes and free
Of too much room to roam in, came to seem a
Verse pattern all its own (ottava rima).
- Bird by Bird, by Anne Lamott
I'd heard good things about this book, so when I saw it in the evil
remaindered bookstore near the discount store where I buy my tea, I grabbed
it. Alas, while there are some good bits, on the whole, I didn't really
care for it. There's something about Lamott's attitude that really rubs
me the wrong way. Perhaps it's her blanket statements about what all
writers are like, some of which really don't fit me at all, and some
of which seem really snotty.
- Sentence Writing Simplified,, by Norwood Selby
It picks one bite-sized subject, and covers it well.
- The World Almanac: 1993
I got this for 49 cents a year after it was current. It's still good for
a great many intents and purposes.
- Who Put the Butter in Butterfly?, by David Feldman
A very readable book on some interesting word origin questions. I took
it out from the library some time back, lost it, and then found it again
some time after I paid for it.
Okay, I'm fading out. I'll finish this tomorrow, probably in addition to
writing about whatever happens then.
|
Contact
Back
Forth
Archives
Index
|