Kaleb Daniels
The audio guidebook offers guidance on developing a personal writing style while maintaining clarity and coherence. It discusses word choice, sentence structure, and the overall tone of writing.
V Anuj
I've heard for years that I should read this short book, that it's a must for any writer and one of the best explanations of the basic rules of English ever written. I've been resisting for the reasons one resists eating spinach. I enjoyed grammar in high school and read several books of grammar rules, and after studying it for long enough it all looks the same. So much for that expectation. If you've been avoiding this based on the same concern, I recommend finding a copy. Not only is this book informative even if you already know grammar well, it's wonderfully entertaining. The original Elements of Style was a textbook written by William Strunk Jr. for his Cornell English class. It contains eight rules of usage, ten rules of composition, some notes on miscellaneous matters of form in writing (such as headings, numerals, and quotations), and lists of commonly misused and misspelled words. It was a sparse forty-three pages. This version is now out of copyright and readily available on-line, although English has changed and at times it is now inaccurate ("to-day" and "any body" are now incorrect). In 1957, after Strunk's death, it was extensively revised by his former student E.B. White, best known today for his children's books (including Charlotte's Web) but also a regular columnist for The New Yorker and other magazines and a winner of the Pulitzer Prize. White expanded the original sections and added an additional section on style. This is the version printed today; the fourth edition also has a forward, an introduction by White, an afterword, and a very useful glossary.