Travel Guides » You Send Me: Getting It Right When You Write Online
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Paperback: 240 pages: 1 item
Publisher: Mariner Books; 2003-08-01
Author: Patricia T. O'Conner, Stewart Kellerman
ISBN: 015602733X
Sales Rank in Books: #1159182
Product Review
Patricia T. O’Conner, the bestselling language maven who charmed legions of readers into civilizing their grammar (Woe Is I) and their writing (Words Fail Me), now drags proper English kicking and screaming into the Age of E-Mail. Do the old truths still apply? Yes, insist O’Conner and co-author Stewart Kellerman, her journalist husband. In fact, good English and good manners are even more important online. Thanks to the computer, we’re writing again, but we’ll have to upgrade our lousy language and social skills or suffer the cyber-consequences. With chapters on etiquette (To E or Not to E), beefier writing (The E-Mail Eunuch), deconstructing a message (All’s Well That Sends Well), and civilized English (Grammar à la Modem), You Send Me delivers everything you need to connect with real people in the virtual world.
Amazon.com Review
Which came first, abominable writing or the computers on which that writing is wrought? Either way, say Patricia T. O'Conner and Stewart Kellerman in You Send Me, "much of what passes for writing in cyberspace is dreadful." Sending e-mail, joining chat rooms, and putting up Web sites is so easy that you might think the writing doesn't matter. Guess again. "When you write well, you connect," say the authors. "When you write badly, you don't." Some of You Send Me--lessons on grammar, punctuation, spelling, and confusing words--applies to all writing; the rest is tailored to online writing, particularly e-mailing. There's advice on writing subject lines, getting to the point, and getting the facts right. The authors recommend politeness and discretion, the use of the Shift key, and the inclusion of greetings and closings. Ask permission before sending attachments, they advise, "don't put anything in an office e-mail that you wouldn't want the whole office to see," "go easy on the Forward button," and "never hit Send in anger." And remember: "The less time you spend thinking about your message," they say, "the more time someone else has to spend reading it." --Jane Steinberg
Product Features
ISBN13: 9780156027335
Condition: New
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Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review
(2 customer reviews)
22 of 24 people found the following review helpful
A Useful Edition and Addition on Language, August 12, 2002
"mrsfaganselves" (huntington, ny United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: You Send Me: Getting It Right When You Write Online (Hardcover)
If you want your grammar and writing lessons sane, sober, serious, skip this book because the jokes, plays on words and plain old fun will drive you crazy. But if you need light, useful advice about writing in cyberspace, or quick reminders about using numbers correctly, office etiquette, or brush-ups on grammar and writing, and have a laugh in the process, this book is for you. I highly recommend it. O'Conner's books (Woe Is I, Words Fail Me, and now, You Send Me) remind me of an editor I work with who is a pun a minute. She can't stop herself and every conversation with her takes such twists and turns that the less articulate are left several sentences behind. If I didn't know that editor, I'd think that O'Conner and Kellerman had to have spent hours creating her more painful plays on words for some of their chapter and section titles: Grammar a la Modem Lurk Before You Leap Go Configure Clone Rangers Myth Information A Click and a Promise...Read more
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
A helpful, easy read, but already dated, April 19, 2009
Angela M. (North Carolina, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: You Send Me: Getting It Right When You Write Online (Paperback)
Judging by the incoherent emails currently cluttering my email inbox, few of us know how to write online. Patricia T. O'Connor and Stewart Kellerman, best selling authors and former New York Times editors, aim to teach the basics of online writing, especially email, in You send me: Getting it right when you write online (2002). According to the authors, writing's popular again thanks to the increased use of the internet, but online writing is often dreadful because few people put the same thought and work into emails as in hard copy writing. Though somewhat different from hard copy writing, online writing should still conform to the standards of spelling, grammar, clarity, and readability. You Send Me tackles these issues and tries to teach the online writer to follow the same rules as non-wired writing.
Overall, the book provides sensible basic advice to writers. You Send Me claims that much of online writing suffers from inadvertent rudeness. Because email has the...Read more