Dan Schwent's Reviews > Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation
Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation
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Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation is a humorous book about punctuation. Who knew punctuation could be so entertaining?
As someone who writes a fair bit (half a million words on Goodreads alone), I know my way around a sentence. However, when this popped up on Amazon on the cheap, I was powerless to resist, like my dog on a piece of cat shit.
In Eats, Shoots & Leaves, Lynn Truss takes us on a Bill Bryson-esque odyssey through a forest of commas, apostrophes, colons, semi-colons, and exclamation marks. Incidentally, did you know an exclamation mark is called a dog's cock in some circles? I did not.
Truss' writing makes things like how to properly use an apostrophe entertaining, using amusing phrasing and real life examples, offering up rules like "Don't use commas like a stupid person." It isn't all laughs, however. I normally avoid colons and semi-colons but I feel like she's given me a greater understanding of them.
There's not a whole lot more to divulge. It's no surprise this short but sweet book is a best-seller. It's very accessible and as entertaining as a book on punctuation can be. For grammarians and writers alike, Eats, Shoots & Leaves is a fun yet useful book about fairly boring subject. Four out of five stars.
As someone who writes a fair bit (half a million words on Goodreads alone), I know my way around a sentence. However, when this popped up on Amazon on the cheap, I was powerless to resist, like my dog on a piece of cat shit.
In Eats, Shoots & Leaves, Lynn Truss takes us on a Bill Bryson-esque odyssey through a forest of commas, apostrophes, colons, semi-colons, and exclamation marks. Incidentally, did you know an exclamation mark is called a dog's cock in some circles? I did not.
Truss' writing makes things like how to properly use an apostrophe entertaining, using amusing phrasing and real life examples, offering up rules like "Don't use commas like a stupid person." It isn't all laughs, however. I normally avoid colons and semi-colons but I feel like she's given me a greater understanding of them.
There's not a whole lot more to divulge. It's no surprise this short but sweet book is a best-seller. It's very accessible and as entertaining as a book on punctuation can be. For grammarians and writers alike, Eats, Shoots & Leaves is a fun yet useful book about fairly boring subject. Four out of five stars.
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Reading Progress
February 25, 2017
– Shelved
February 25, 2017
– Shelved as:
to-read
March 2, 2017
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Started Reading
March 4, 2017
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59.0%
March 4, 2017
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85.0%
March 4, 2017
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2017
March 4, 2017
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2017-books
March 4, 2017
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Finished Reading
Comments Showing 1-6 of 6 (6 new)
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Betsy
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Mar 05, 2017 06:46AM
Punctuation, boring? Not to me. Wonderful review, Dan! Now to complete this, I must use a colon: a fantastic invention that supplants phrases such as "such as." And where would we be without semicolons; nowhere, I say!
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James wrote: "A very, very, very nice review Dan; I thought this book was very, very useful as well."The colon/semi-colon stuff was worth the buck ninety-nine alone
A charming review, though the book was a little too narrow for my taste. For comparison, consider The Fight for English: How Language Pundits Ate, Shot, and Left, which is a similar format and lighthearted style, but a broader remit.

