Yes, I Could Care Less: How to Be a Language Snob Without Being a Jerk
| Müəllif | Bill Walsh |
|---|---|
| Nəşr olunduğu il | 2013 |
| Elm sahəsi | Ədəbiyyat və dilçilik |
| Nəşriyyat | St. Martin's Griffin |
| Nəşr yeri | New York |
Bill Walsh. Yes, I Could Care Less: How to Be a Language Snob Without Being a Jerk. New York, St. Martin's Griffin, 2013.
Pat yourself on the back if you found issues in every one of these sentences, but remember: There is a world out there beyond the stylebooks, beyond Strunk and White, beyond Lynne Truss and Failblogs. In his long-awaited follow-up to Lapsing Into a Comma and The Elephants of Style, while steering readers and writers on the proper road to correct usage, Walsh cautions against slavish adherence to rules, emphasizing that the correct choice often depends on the situation. He might disagree with the AP Stylebook or Merriam-Webster, but he always backs up his preferences with logic and humor. Walsh argues with both sides in the language wars, the sticklers and the apologists, and even with himself, over the disputed territory and ultimately over whether all this is warfare or just a big misunderstanding. Part usage manual, part confessional, and part manifesto, Yes, I Could Care Less bounces from sadomasochism to weather geekery, from "Top Chef" to Monty Python, from the chile of New Mexico to the daiquiris of Las Vegas, with Walsh's distinctive take on the way we write and talk.