Search:
International
UK US
Browse Categories

More Anguished English: an Expose of Embarrassing Excruciating, and Egregious Errors in English

BUY FROM AMAZON.COM
Price: $6.99

Usually ships in 24 hours

By: Richard Lederer
(4 customer reviews)
Buy New: $6.99


Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

PRODUCT DETAILS

Publisher: Dell
Pub. Date: 4th September 1994
Catalog: Book
Media: Mass Market Paperback
Number Of Pages: 208
Ean: 9780440215776
Isbn: 0440215773

ABOUT THIS BOOK

USER REVIEWS

Funny or not, here I come!
~ Written on Jun 15, 2008. out of users found this review helpful.

Though Richard Lederer writes and introduces his books beautifully, the series of these books, in which the author shares a collection of English errors, I found it not to be as entertaining as I thought or hoped it would. That is not to say that they are not a good buy, but rather, that whether you will find this book funny or not, is a very subjective point of view.

For some, it will merely put a smile on their face, other will have some giggles, and still some more, will convulse with laughter.

Buy it or not, It will be subjective. There is nothing that would have prepared me ahead of time... so again, it is a matter of taste and what you may find funny.


~ Written on Jan 10, 2007. out of users found this review helpful.

This book is great for Enlish lovers. Richard Lederer writes witty books which are easily read and quite clever.

More Where This Came From -- An Endless Supply.
~ Written on Jul 18, 2005. 3 out of 23 users found this review helpful.

There is an endless supply of this type of English bashing. It is not fractured per se, only verbs could be that. It is sometimes lewd, crude, and politically incorrect.

The AMERICAN HERITAGE Dictionary describes 'Anguish" as being
"tormentend;" in MW, it is "full of torment." That's how I feel when the censors get on my case. Lay off, whoever you are. I haven't been able to see where I went wrong -- I didn't appreciate the puns and some of the language. To me, this is not funny. Poe is one of my favorite writers and should not be demeaned in such a fashion.

Richard Lederer is the author of fifteen other books about English and has a column, "Looking at Language" in newspapers and magazines nationwide. Today's column by our local grammar guru suggests everyone use redundancies: "refer back," 'Past history,' and "absolute necessity." I don't always agree with him, especially over the use of the word 'that.' It makes the speaker sound ignorant to use too many of that word. Yet, he claims that you can't use too many. I beg to differ.

He is not an expert on English in spite of what that total may presume. Maybe he is educated though it does not show through puns, which is his specialty. He has made it his life's dream to do put-downs on our English. He still has a lot to learn.

This book is just a continuation of the first one, of which me made as many cast-offs as he could to generate more income. Too much of anything can be bad, and this continuing series is not what it could be. If he'd leave off the crude bathroom humor, sleaze, profanity, making fun of literature icons, and berating our wonderful language skills, it might be tolerable. As is, it is for a certain small audience of unschooled people who want to be titilated and share the ugly stuff with like-minded people. There are some of us who revere the use of English, grammatical correctness and vocabulary of which is lacking in these books.

A hilarious look at the trippings of English usage.
~ Written on Mar 18, 1999. 28 out of 28 users found this review helpful.

The biggest trouble I have is trying to read this book in public. I laugh out loud and have tears in my eyes. I'm sure on lookers worry that someone should be calling the white coats out for me. The Lederer books are all a gem for anyone, but the more well read you are, the more you appreciate this digest of mis-statements and bloopers.

SIMILAR ITEMS: