Product Details
A Writer's Companion

A Writer's Companion
By Richard Marius

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Product Description

This brief guide to writing the essay and writing across the curriculum is indeed true to its title. It offers excellent advice on developing and polishing prose, with an emphasis on style and process--all with wit, charm, and intelligence.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #46674 in Books
  • Published on: 1998-08-07
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 264 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
Richard Marius directed the Expository Writing Program at Harvard University for sixteen years, teaching students and creating the philosophy for the only course required of all Harvard undergraduates. That philosophy is embodied in this book. He is the author of three novels, biographies of Thomas More and Martin Luther, and several textbooks on writing including the McGRAW-HILL COLLEGE HANDBOOK which he wrote with Harvey Wiener. His articles have appeared in publications as diverse as the medieval journal, Tradition and the nonmedieval journal, Esquire. He reviews books for many periodicals, including The New York Times, and he writes a regular book review column for Harvard Magazine. He was one of the editors of The Yale Edition of the Complete Works of St. Thomas More, and with Keith Frome, he has edited the Columbia Anthology of Civil War Poetry. He now teaches English and Religious Studies at Harvard and is at work on a fourth novel and a large book on Martin Luther. In 1993 he was awarded the Harvard Foundation Medal for his contributions to minorities at Harvard.


Customer Reviews

A book that's worh living with5
Richard Marius's handbook for writers is the best I have ever seen. It is writen with the same clarity of purpose as Strunk and White's _The Elements of Style_ but more thorough on the rhetorical dimensions of writing. His chapters, "Paragraphs" and "The Fundamental Principles of Sentences," are especially useful and entertaining to read. I must, however, point out a startling difference between the the third and fourth edition. The third is more gutsy and truthful about English Department agendum in universities. Marius's revisions for the fourth edition before he died seem uncharacteristic of the ethical principles his writing has always been known for. In short I find Marius's feelings more present and direct in the third edition than in the much softer fourth edition. To give an example of Marius's grit and honesty about the growing popularity of autobiographical writing in certain academies, I quote from Marius's preface to the third edition, which he uncharacterstically euphemizes in the fourth: "I don't care much for sappy writing where writers tell me what they feel about things rather than what they know about things. We seem awash nowadays in the rhetoric of dramatic personal experience, where writers gush over their emotions about the common places of life" (xiv). To conclude the sentiment that this review of Marius's book inspired, I quote George Steiner from his interview in _The Paris Review_ about writers who he says take "enormous risks": ". . . a book that's worth living with is the act of one voice, the act of a passion, the act of a _persona_" (51).

A vital book for anyone who writes in the English language5
Richard Marius has done an excellent job with this book. In an engaging and witty style, he sets forth the dos and don'ts for writing the English language. He happily tells why certain "elementary school" rules should be ignored (beginning a sentence with a conjunction) and points out common grammatical errors ("as" verses "like" and "bad" verses "badly" are two I had to clean up). This small but dense book is a joy for anyone who needs to polish up his/her use of the English language.

Review5
A Writer's Companion provides me with a rubric to gauge my writing skills. The book offers insight into the writing process. At some level, I feel inspired to write down my thoughts again. I know that everyone has a story to tell and it can be a form of therapy to help me work through the journey of life. If I can help someone else along the way, it can be an added bonus. Marius speaks about getting your thoughts down onto paper. Marius speaks of friends that are in the later stages of life and how they have so many stories to tell, but fail to write them out. Writing is a means a preserving time and memories, because the writings will live on after death.