A CONCISE COURSE IN THE ART OF WRITING Whether you're composing a letter,writing a school thesis,or THE starting a novel,The Oxford Essential Guide to Writing offers expert advice on how to think more creatively,how to conjure up ideas from scratch,and how to express those ideas clearly and elegantly.No matter where you find yourself in the writing process-from the daunting blank page to the rough draft that needs shaping to the small but important questions of punctuation-you'll find what you need in this one handy. all-inclusive volume. OXFORD .How to use journals to store ideas and explore potential topics Examples of style and technique from such masters of form as Mark Twain,H.L.Mencken,E.B.White,and Annie Dillard THE ESSENTIAL RESOURCE-FROM THE .Advice on using outlines to shape your material-and drafts and revisions to refine them FIRST NAME IN REFERENCE Selecting the proper words to convey both information and point of view .A useful appendix on punctuation,ranging from commas to Essential underlining and capitalization OXFORD Guide to Writing ESSENTIAL GUIDE WRITING .Step-by-step approach for organizing,shaping, TO WRITING and completing your work Rules of style and technique 17640 Appendix on punctuation and grammar Examples of expert prose from the masters 183100599 ISBN0-425-17b40-1 Thomas S.Kane s5.99
Acknowledgments This book is based on The Oxford Guide to Writing:A Rhet- oric and Handbook for College Students,and thanks are due once more to those who contributed to that book:my friend and colleague Leonard J.Peters;Professors Miriam Baker of Dowling College,David Hamilton of the University of lowa, Robert Lyons and Sandra Schor of Queens College of the City University of New York,and Joseph Trimmer of Ball State University,all of whom read the manuscript and con- tributed perceptive comments;Ms.Cheryl Kupper,who copyedited that text with great thoroughness and care;and John W.Wright,my editor at the Oxford University Press. For the present edition I am again grateful to Professor Leonard J.Peters and to John W.Wright.In addition I wish to thank William P.Sisler and Joan Bossert,my editors at Oxford University Press,who encouraged,criticized,and im- proved,as good editors do. Kittery Point,Maine T.S.K. December 1987
Acknowledgments This book is based on The Oxford Guide to Writing: A Rhetoric and Handbook for College Students, and thanks are due once more to those who contributed to that book: my friend and colleague Leonard J. Peters; Professors Miriam Baker of Dowling College, David Hamilton of the University of Iowa, Robert Lyons and Sandra Schor of Queens College of the City University of New York, and Joseph Trimmer of Ball State University, all of whom read the manuscript and contributed perceptive comments; Ms. Cheryl Kupper, who copyedited that text with great thoroughness and care; and John W. Wright, my editor at the Oxford University Press. For the present edition I am again grateful to Professor Leonard J. Peters and to John W. Wright. In addition I wish to thank William P. Sisler and Joan Bossert, my editors at Oxford University Press, who encouraged, criticized, and improved, as good editors do. Kittery Point, Maine T.S.K. December 1987
Contents Introduction 3 1.Subject,Reader,and Kinds of Writing 5 2.Strategy and Style 9 3. Grammar,Usage,and Mechanics 13 PART 1 The Writing Process 17 4.Looking for Subjects 19 5.Exploring for Topics 23 6. Making a Plan 29 7.Drafts and Revisions 34 PART II.The Essay 43 8.Beginning 45 9.Closing 60 10.Organizing the Middle 67 11.Point of View.Persona.and Tone 74 PART 3 The Expository Paragraph 87 12.Basic Structure 89 13.Paragraph Unity 95 14.Paragraph Development:(1)Illustration and Restatement 106
Contents Introduction 3 1. Subject, Reader, and Kinds of Writing 5 2. Strategy and Style 9 3. Grammar, Usage, and Mechanics 13 PART 1 The Writing Process 4. Looking for Subjects 19 5. Exploring for Topics 23 6. Making a Plan 29 7. Drafts and Revisions 34 17 PART II. 8. 9. 10. 11. The Essay 43 Beginning 45 Closing 60 Organizing the Middle Point of View, Persona, 67 and Tone 74 PART 3 The Expository Paragraph 87 12. Basic Structure 89 13. Paragraph Unity 95 14. Paragraph Development: (1) Illustration and Restatement 106
8 CONTENTS 15.Paragraph Development:(2)Comparison,Contrast, and Analogy 114 16.Paragraph Development:(3)Cause and Effect 125 17.Paragraph Development:(4)Definition,Analysis, and Qualification 132 PART 4.The Sentence 149 18.The Sentence:A Definition 151 19.Sentence Styles 161 20.The Well-Written Sentence:(1)Concision 191 21.The Well-Written Sentence:(2)Emphasis 200 22.The Well-Written Sentence:(3)Rhythm 223 23.The Well-Written Sentence:(4)Variety 234 PART V.Diction 241 24.Meaning 243 25.Clarity and Simplicity 262 26. Concision 281 27. Figurative Language 295 28. Unusual Words and Collocations 325 29.Improving Your Vocabulary:Dictionaries 336 PART VI.Description and Narration 349 30.Description 351 31.Narration 366 PART VII.Punctuation 377 Introduction 379 32. Stops 383 33. The Other Marks 417 Name Index 439 Subject Index 445
8 CONTENTS 15. Paragraph Development: (2) Comparison, Contrast, and Analogy 114 16. Paragraph Development: (3) Cause and Effect 125 17. Paragraph Development: (4) Definition, Analysis, and Qualification 132 PART 4. The Sentence 149 18. The Sentence: A Definition 151 19. Sentence Styles 161 20. The Well-Written Sentence: (1) Concision 191 21. The Well-Written Sentence: (2) Emphasis 200 22. The Well-Written Sentence: (3) Rhythm 223 23. The Well-Written Sentence: (4) Variety 234 PART v. Diction 241 24. Meaning 243 25. Clarity and Simplicity 262 26. Concision 281 27. Figurative Language 295 28. Unusual Words and Collocations 325 29. Improving Your Vocabulary: Dictionaries 336 PART vi. Description and Narration 349 30. Description 351 31. Narration 366 PART VII. Punctuation 377 Introduction 379 32. Stops 383 33. The Other Marks 417 Name Index 439 Subject Index 445
The New Oxford Guide to Writing
The New Oxford Guide to Writing