Picture of author.

About the Author

Includes the name: Benjamin Dreyer

Image credit: Benjamin Dreyer in September 2018 Photo by Gabriel Dreyer

Works by Benjamin Dreyer

Associated Works

The Custom of the Country (1913) — Notes, some editions — 2,715 copies, 69 reviews

Tagged

2019 (13) audiobook (5) copyediting (8) currently-reading (11) ebook (15) editing (24) English (23) English language (26) English usage (7) grammar (69) hardcover (6) humor (14) Kindle (15) language (72) library (5) linguistics (18) non-fiction (133) on writing (5) own (8) punctuation (9) read (10) read in 2019 (7) reference (77) style (11) style guide (21) to-read (126) unread (8) usage (10) words (8) writing (135)

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1958-05-11
Gender
male
Education
Northwestern University
Occupations
copy editor
managing editor
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
New York, New York, USA
Associated Place (for map)
New York, USA

Members

Reviews

56 reviews
Benjamin Dreyer is the copy chief at Random House. In this book, he explains punctuation, grammar, confusable words, commonly misspelled words, and how to use the passive voice effectively (and when it isn’t needed). His examples are clear and often amusing. He is honest about the grammar peeves he himself has (everyone has them), and he debunks the perennially debunked (why do we have to keep doing this?) myths about English grammar. The only thing I would perhaps quibble about is the show more footnotes. I love footnotes, especially funny ones, but I think having three or more on a page is a bit excessive. That’s just me, though—and the footnotes themselves, as I said, are funny. I will be getting my own copy of this book and recommend that you do the same if you’re at all interested in English grammar and writing well. show less
½
I was so relieved when Benjamin Dreyer confessed. "When I started out as a copy editor, I realized that most of what I knew about grammar I knew instinctively," I read with relief. I was not alone!

He won my heart by adding, "Even now I'd be hard-pressed to tell you what a nominative absolute is, I think that the word "genitive" sounds vaguely smutty, and I certainly don't know, or care to know, how to diagram a sentence. I hope I'm not shocking you."

We did diagram sentences in junior show more high....in 1965... Don't ask me how to do that now.

In school, I often got an A for content and a C for grammar and spelling. I never did learn to touch type with accuracy, and any proficiency I had gained in spelling has disappeared.

I often said that I came out of Temple University knowing how to read intelligently. I was quite unemployable and ended up in customer service and sales.

When I somehow got a job as a copywriter/copyeditor in promotion for a small publishing house (I had worked for a former employee and my new boss thought I had learned her skills through osmosis), I worked hard to correct my errors by reading grammar books. My coworker and I had many heated discussions about how to write; she was a grammar nerd.

Later in life, while schooling our son, my family all were writing and we would critique each other. I had become a member of the dreaded 'grammar police' and oversensitive to bad writing habits.

I took short-term editing jobs and people hated me. I edited a manuscript for a self-published author who appreciated my insight and gave me double our agreed on price.

Well, that was a long time ago. I had thrown out my ragged grammar books before a move. Now, I needed a refresher course. And hearing so many good things about Dreyer's English, bought an ebook.

What a treasure! So much useful information, shared in such an entertaining way! A joy to read!

I now understand why I never know if I should use gray or grey. My history of reading British writers had me totally confused.

I am very grateful.
show less
Benjamin Dreyer, the copy chief at Random House, "wandered into his job nearly three decades ago" when he started out as a freelance proofreader. He's worked his way up since then and, in "Dreyer's English," this gentle guru gives us valuable tips about the proper use of punctuation and capitalization, warns us to avoid mixing up words that sound alike but have different meanings, and urges us to proofread our copy for spelling mistakes and factual errors. Unless you are wild about this show more stuff--which I am--you might worry that a manual on how to write more clearly and elegantly might be nit-picky and/or sleep-inducing. Fear not. Mr. Dreyer is a clever fellow who entertains us with puns; allusions to popular culture; marvelous excerpts from such works as Dickens's "Bleak House" and Baum's "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz"; and witty footnotes and asides that add to the generally lighthearted tone.

I love the chapter heading, "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up (Your Prose)." This pokes fun at those pompous decluttering books that are all the rage these days. Although Dreyer does not tell us how to get rid of the junk in our homes, he is a stickler for streamlining sentences. In addition, he suggests ways to convey one's meaning lucidly and succinctly while steering clear of dangling participles, mistakes in subject-verb agreement, misuse of quotation marks, misspellings, and redundancies. Dreyer also cautions us to give clichés a wide berth (I couldn't resist) and to avoid pretentiousness. He is a kinder version of my college English professor who commanded us to "cut and connect"—to trim our writing down to its essentials and ensure that each idea leads to the next seamlessly. "Dreyer's English" gives us the tools to improve our prose, and the author charms us with sassy and humorous anecdotes that demonstrate how much fun playing with language can be.
show less
Benjamin Dreyer is copy chief of Random House, and he wants to share with readers what he has learned over the years about good writing. Unlike a many books on usage and style, this one is not only informative but humorous. [It is killing me not to write quite humorous, but in his very first chapter, he lists words to eliminate in order to make your prose crisper, such as: very, rather, really, quite, in fact, inter alia.] He advises:

“If you can last a week without writing any of what show more I’ve come to think of as the Wan Intensifiers and Throat Clearers - I wouldn’t ask you to go a week without saying them; that would render most people, especially British people, mute - you will at the end of that week be a considerably better writer than you were at the beginning.”

He also attacks the modifier “literally,” calling it “the Intensifier from Hell.” “No,” he states, “you did not literally die laughing.”

He explains that prose rules “aid us in using our words to their preeminent purpose: to communicate clearly with our readers.” He avers, “I swear to you, a well-constructed sentence sounds better.” Still, he is much more flexible that one would suppose. Dreyer in his witty, breezy book tells us that most of the don’ts we learned in the last century were (or are now) maybes.

He notes, somewhat dispiritedly, that the English language is “not so easily ruled and regulated . . . [it] continues to evolve anarchically.”

In many cases Dreyer has the good grace to tell us what the old rule was. He proposes that the writer may observe them or not in his (or ‘her’ or sometimes ‘their’) discretion. (He doesn’t care for the use of the singular ‘their,’ but seems ready to bow to the inevitable if the gender of a single person is unknown.)

He does stress the importance of the serial comma (sometimes called the “Oxford comma”), providing funny examples of misunderstandings from omitting it. [That is the comma that precedes the final ‘and’ in an enumeration in most American books, but is typically absent (presumably to save space) in most American newspapers.]

He also is against using the passive voice, even while allowing that sometimes one needs to emphasize something other than the subject of a sentence. But he wants you at least to know what the passive voice is, writing:

“If you can append ‘by zombies’ to the end of a sentence (or, yes, ‘by the clown’), you’ve indeed written a sentence in the passive voice.”

He is not above taking opportunities to inject veiled political jabs into his rationales for his recommendations. For example, he bemoans the tendency of the President of the United States to misspell words, and has this to say on the importance of fact-checking quotes:

“In an era redolent to the high heavens with lies passed off as truths - often by career perjurers rabidly eager to condemn as fabrications facts they find inconvenient - I beg you not to continue to perpetrate and perpetuate these fortune-cookie hoaxes, which in their often insipid vapidity are as demeaning to the spirit as in the inauthenticity they are insulting to the history of the written word.”

He includes sections on, inter alia, “Peeves and Crotchets” (such as the use of aggravate versus irritate), “The Confusables” (affect versus effect, for example), and “Notes on Proper Nouns” which includes “Miscellaneous Facty Things” and “The Trimmables,” i.e., all those redundant phrases we use, from “blend together” to “exact same.”

Dreyer peppers the text with funny footnotes, sometimes all the more amusing for being digressive.

This book, like many of its genre, can be sampled a little at a time. I enjoyed it so much I read straight through, over to cover.
show less

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Statistics

Works
5
Also by
1
Members
1,619
Popularity
#15,905
Rating
4.1
Reviews
52
ISBNs
21

Charts & Graphs