Last year, I mentioned this book in a post about grammar and punctuation, but I didn't think of making it a "real" book review. Here's what I said:
Does bad grammar make you [sic]? Me, too. To read an editor's post about misused quotation marks, followed by her readers' comments on bad grammar, click here: http://snickollet.blogspot.com/2007/04/im-not-going-to-work-but-im-still.html
After you read that, get yourself a copy of Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation by Lynne Truss. The book is hilarious!
To teach a class on grammar and punctuation I used a program called "I saw a dollar walking down the street." Don't you just want to ask, "Which way was it going?"
__________
So now, belatedly, here's a review of the book.
Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation by Lynne Truss was published in 2003 in Great Britain, followed by the American edition in 2004. It's nonfiction, of course, and sounds terribly boring because it's about punctuation. But it isn't at ALL boring, I promise.
I'm adding this larger picture of the book's cover so you can see that the panda on the ladder is painting out (whiting out) that comma between "Eats" and "Shoots." (Click to enlarge the picture.) The title comes from information about pandas, that a panda "eats shoots and leaves." Bamboo shoots, that is, and bamboo leaves. If you put a comma where it doesn't belong, it appears that the panda eats (something), then shoots (notice the gun in the other panda's paw), and leaves (the scene of the crime). Gotta be careful about those commas. Wow, they can really change the meaning of a sentence!
I already wrote that the book is hilarious, so you know I had fun reading it. For that reason I give it a high rating.
Rated: 9/10, an excellent book.
I read this a couple years ago and loved it, too! As an English teacher it was right up my alley! I shared quite a bit of it with my kids and they got a kick out of it, too.
ReplyDeleteI keep meaning to read it and never get round to it - I think, mostly, because I'm worried I'm going to be reading one long grammar lesson, and I've had enough of those in my time! But given your review, I think I'll have to revise my opinion!
ReplyDeleteHey, Bonnie,
ReplyDeleteThanks for the link.
I *loved* this book. It takes someone with real talent to make a book about punctuation not only interesting but laugh-out-loud funny, doesn't it?
The single sentence I used last year to describe this book ("The book is hilarious!") is in a league with Cady's summary of And Tango Makes Three ("It was about penguins"). I guess that means she'll be doing wordy, full scale book reviews by next year?
ReplyDeleteRead all of Cady's review here:
http://bonniesbooks.blogspot.com/2008/04/and-tango-makes-three-cadys-review.html
What a fun review Bonnie! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThis one is on my TBR!
I loved this book too. Isn't it great when a "reference" book is so delightful?!
ReplyDeleteBonnie, I must confess--I think I am often guilty of grammar and punctuation errors. I had very little specific instruction in middle or high school, and I didn't go to college, so I suppose I've learned mostly from just reading. Perhaps reading the book you recommend will help--it sounds delightful.
ReplyDeleteMy daughter Ariel tells me I use way too many commas in my writing. She tells me I need to commit "comma-cide." (Mmm...did I use those quotation marks correctly?) :-)