Author picture

About the Author

Rosalie Maggio is the author of 22 books and lives in Pine Mountain, California.

Works by Rosalie Maggio

The Nonsexist Word Finder (1988) 65 copies
Quotations on Education (1997) 23 copies
The Music Box Christmas (1990) 11 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1943-11-08
Date of death
2021-09-18
Gender
female
Education
College of Saint Catherine (Bx | French)
Cause of death
cancer (pancreatic)
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
Fort Dodge, Iowa, USA
St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
Los Angeles, California, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

8 reviews
This dictionary lists bias-free alternative terms to and clarification of words like spinster, manned, disabled, plus ethnic references, and more. As the author points out, it's not about oversensitivity to terms. "One of the rewards of breaking away from traditional, biased language...is a dramatic improvement in writing style" and "the fear of saying the wrong thing is the proverbial fear that springs from ignorance." After browsing this, you can see it really isn't that difficult to use show more bias-free language. show less
Good advice to anyone who thinks that they might want to talk to another human being. Some of it is common sense (understandably) and some advice is going a bit far, but overall it is worthwhile.
I've just started reading this book but the contents are quite interesting with real-life examples such as hand shacking tips (which we usually don't pay attention to).I find it quite entertaining with some funny jokes around.Those quotes are great.
What ages would I recommend it too? – Twelve and up.

Length? – Resource, based on necessary chapters needed at the time.

Setting? – 1990's and previous.

Written approximately? – 1990.

Does the story leave questions in the readers mind? – Needs an updated version to cover email and internet etiquette.

Any issues the author (or a more recent publisher) should cover? Yes.
1. Updates to cover email letters.
2. updates for blog, web, and major social site messaging.

Short storyline:
This show more resource covers many types of letters, how to write them, what to say, and what not to say.

What I would like to see: More information on letters to editors, agents, publishers, web site designers, graphic designers, and book marketers. Even letters to your favorite author would be nice.

Notes for the reader:
1. A good, if slightly outdated resource.
2. Watch out for the cliches. Know when to use them, and when not to. They can be good classifiers, and yet they can be boring.
show less

Awards

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Statistics

Works
26
Members
1,627
Popularity
#15,813
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
8
ISBNs
62
Languages
2

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