Keep Editing Alive
John McIntyre, former editor from The Baltimore Sun has posted on his blog a piece about the newly-released Garner's Modern American Usage.
I wanted to repost Garner's request in order to support my colleagues.
I have a favor to ask of you as a loyal reader: In the next few hours or days, would you please go to http://www.amazon.com/ or http://www.bn.com/ and buy one or more copies of the new third edition of Garner’s Modern American Usage as holiday presents? In fact, keep this gift possibility in mind through the end of the year, won't you?
I need your help in sending a message to the major bookstore chains: they're not stocking the book because they've told Oxford University Press that they consider usage guides a "defunct category." It's maddeningly unbelievable. Please help me show them that they're stupendously wrong.
Meanwhile, in the coming months you might ask about the book when you're in a bookstore: ask the managers why they don't stock copies, and encourage them to do so.
If you're curious to see what effect you're having, watch the rankings on Amazon.com or Bn.com in coming days and weeks. We'll be alerting the major chains to those numbers, and we want to get as close to the top 50 as we can. If you're trying to order and see that the book is labeled "out of stock," order anyway: the effort is also to ensure that the online booksellers keep adequate stocks.
In return for this favor -- it's a grassroots effort -- I'll be happy to inscribe copies that you send to LawProse for that purpose, if you (1) include a filled-out FedEx airbill for returning them to you, and (2) suggest an appropriate inscription.
It's important that as a society that communicates so readily and in mass quantities in written form, that we keep editors around to keep the quality of language in good working order. It's not about being grammar mavens; it's about making sure what we're writing is clear and concise.


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