Grammar for a Full Life: How the Ways We Shape a Sentence Can Limit or Enlarge Us
Why settle for a normal book on grammar when you could learn new things about it and become your own best self at the same time?
If you're looking for a traditional manual of rules, this much-acclaimed, groundbreaking book by a cofounder of Harvard University's Writing Center may not be the one for you. Grammar is about much more than rules: it's about choices, too-since a thought can always be expressed correctly in multiple ways.
In Grammar for a Full Life, author Lawrence Weinstein reveals how our grammatical choices either stifle or boost our...
- sense of agency in life
- creativity
- depth of connection to others
- and mindfulness.
Weinstein shows that certain tweaks to a person's grammar can bring consequential changes in his or her fulfillment and well-being. In this wonderfully readable book, he describes some forty transformative moves that can be made with English punctuation and syntax. In the book, you'll learn, for instance, why a greater use of active voice constructions builds assertive energy in us. You'll discover how-paradoxically-cutting back on the "intensifiers" (exclamation marks and words like really, absolutely) heightens our awareness of the world.
There is not too much about personality and life that Weinstein doesn't see benefitting from a wiser use of grammar. In a chapter titled "Bonding," even sex comes in for some grammatical attention. Even fear of death receives its own, almost lyrical chapter near book's end.
The farther one gets into this remarkable book, the clearer it becomes that Weinstein's wish-for both himself and us-is actualization of "the whole person," through language.
No reader should be intimidated by Weinstein's university credentials. As important a book as his is, it's conversational throughout-and it's packed with numerous compelling, clear examples. You will never think of commas or possessive pronouns in the same way again. Your regard for the conjunction "but" is likely to soar.
Praise for Grammar for a Full Life has been coming in from thought leaders of all kinds, ranging from well-known authors on language, such as Anne Fadiman, Lynne Truss, and Richard Lederer, to influential spiritual thinkers, like Rabbi Lawrence Kushner. Cornel West calls it "brilliant and original." Pioneer in mind-body studies Joan Borysenko writes, "If you read just one book this year, let this be the one."
[PLEASE NOTE: Grammar for a Full Life is not a book intended for the person new to the English language. It assumes familiarity with many of the basics of English.]
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Become an affiliateLawrence Weinstein has written a brilliant and original book that beckons and lures us toward the good and mature life so missing in our troubled times!
-- Cornel West, author of Race Matters
Writers and non-writers alike will learn so much from this wise book. I loved it!
-- Lynne Truss
author of Eats, Shoots & Leaves
Weinstein confirms what we writers have always known in our hearts: even when we decide whether to insert a comma, we reveal our characters.
-- Anne Fadiman
author of The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down
Every so often comes along a book that changes how we think. Grammar for a Full Life is one of those. In it, Lawrence Weinstein passionately coalesces the art and craft of writing with the grand adventure of being a human being.
-- Richard Lederer