The Joy of Syntax picks up where middle school left off, providing a fresh foundation in English syntax served up by someone with an impressive record of making this otherwise inaccessible subject a true joy. With simple, pithy information on everything from basic parts of speech and sentence structure to usage and grammar pitfalls, this guide provides everything you need to approach grammar with confidence.
INTRODUCTION
Hey, word nerd: I know your secret. You’re a natural at language. You’re the person friends ask to read their resumes, their school papers, their cover letters. You have a sixth sense for grammar, and on top of your innate ability, you’ve amassed quite a bit of knowledge along the way. Maybe another language savant in the family set you on the path. Maybe you went out of your way to learn the difference between who and whom, the meaning of dangling participle, or how to choose between lay and lie

You’re good at this stuff, better than almost anyone you know, but you have a dark secret: There are holes in your knowledge. Big ones. Despite all that natural ability and hard-earned learning, you feel that you never got a good, solid foundation in grammar. Sentence mechanics remain a mystery to you. You’d be surprised to learn that tomorrow is an adverb and you’re not clear why I feel bad is the grammatical choice over I feel badly. Worst of all, you’re not quite sure what to do about it. You can’t go back to high school. You certainly can’t go back to a better high school than the one you attended. And every resource you’ve sought out let you down. The “help” you found was either too painfully dry to compete with whatever was on HBO or it was just more of the same grammar tidbits you already know. 

Well, here’s some joyous news: I wrote this book for you. 

It’s real grammar, the kind that you’d otherwise need a linguistics degree to acquire. But it’s designed specifically for word nerds who find that learning grammar, when it’s done just right, can be a real joy.
JUNE CASAGRANDE is a veteran journalist and syndicated columnist. She is the author of Grammar Snobs Are Great Big Meanies and Mortal Syntax (Penguin). She is a former Los Angeles Times staff reporter, and her “A Word, Please” grammar column currently appears in several community news sections. She has also studied improvisational comedy with renowned troupes the Groundlings and ComedySportz. View titles by June Casagrande

About

The Joy of Syntax picks up where middle school left off, providing a fresh foundation in English syntax served up by someone with an impressive record of making this otherwise inaccessible subject a true joy. With simple, pithy information on everything from basic parts of speech and sentence structure to usage and grammar pitfalls, this guide provides everything you need to approach grammar with confidence.

Excerpt

INTRODUCTION
Hey, word nerd: I know your secret. You’re a natural at language. You’re the person friends ask to read their resumes, their school papers, their cover letters. You have a sixth sense for grammar, and on top of your innate ability, you’ve amassed quite a bit of knowledge along the way. Maybe another language savant in the family set you on the path. Maybe you went out of your way to learn the difference between who and whom, the meaning of dangling participle, or how to choose between lay and lie

You’re good at this stuff, better than almost anyone you know, but you have a dark secret: There are holes in your knowledge. Big ones. Despite all that natural ability and hard-earned learning, you feel that you never got a good, solid foundation in grammar. Sentence mechanics remain a mystery to you. You’d be surprised to learn that tomorrow is an adverb and you’re not clear why I feel bad is the grammatical choice over I feel badly. Worst of all, you’re not quite sure what to do about it. You can’t go back to high school. You certainly can’t go back to a better high school than the one you attended. And every resource you’ve sought out let you down. The “help” you found was either too painfully dry to compete with whatever was on HBO or it was just more of the same grammar tidbits you already know. 

Well, here’s some joyous news: I wrote this book for you. 

It’s real grammar, the kind that you’d otherwise need a linguistics degree to acquire. But it’s designed specifically for word nerds who find that learning grammar, when it’s done just right, can be a real joy.

Author

JUNE CASAGRANDE is a veteran journalist and syndicated columnist. She is the author of Grammar Snobs Are Great Big Meanies and Mortal Syntax (Penguin). She is a former Los Angeles Times staff reporter, and her “A Word, Please” grammar column currently appears in several community news sections. She has also studied improvisational comedy with renowned troupes the Groundlings and ComedySportz. View titles by June Casagrande