Read Building Great Sentences Online
Authors: Brooks Landon
A perfect companion to Lanham's
Style: An Anti-Textbook
is Winston Weathers's
An Alternate Style: Options in Composition
, published in 1980. This book expands and provides numerous examples for the idea of Grammar B that Weathers first set forth in his
Freshman English News
article “Grammars of Style: New Options in Composition.”
When Weathers first proposed Grammar B, it was provocative, even controversial. His thesis was that what got taught in schools was a Grammar A, prim and proper and full of rules, most of them of the “Thou shalt not” kind. Grammar B, on the other hand, was the much more free “Anything goes” approach actually practiced by professional writersâand by writing teachers when they weren't teaching their students Grammar A. Weathers characterized Grammar A as “the well-made box,” a set of prescriptions and rules into which writers were expected to force their prose, the writing equivalent of the legendary Procrustean bed, which stretched victims if they were too short and cut off their feet if they were too tall. As “Professor X,” the persona adopted by Weathers in this argument, complained: “I may be free to put âwhat I say' in the plain box or the ornate box, in the large box or in the small box, in the fragile box or the sturdy box”âbut always in the box! Professor X went on to wonder
[i]f somewhere there isn't some sort of container (1) that will allow me to package “what I have to say” without trimming my “content” to fit into a particular compositional mode, (2) that will actually encourage me to discover new “things to say” because of the very opportunity a newly-shaped container gives me, (3) that will be more suitable perhaps to my own mental processes, and (4) that will provide me with a greater rhetorical flexibility, allowing me to package what I have to say in more ways than one and thus reach more audiences than one.
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Urging us to be alert to emerging options and to create options, Professor X calls for writing instruction that identifies more stylistic options “in all areasâin vocabulary, usage, sentence forms, dictional levels, paragraph types, ways of organizing material into whole compositions: options in all that we mean by style.” Professor X suggests that these new options would constitute an entirely new “grammar of style,” many of the features of which are already in use in not only experimental writing, but also in our own more mundane efforts, but are usually not recognized and almost never approved of by conventional writing instruction. This would allow us to infuse some of the freewheeling style of Grammar B into the more constrained options of Grammar A. He suggests that some of the features of this new Grammar could be seen in the emerging prose of “the New Journalism.” Of course, what was emerging as “new” in 1976 is now very much the form of journalism we have come to know and expect.
One feature of this Grammar B is the “crot,” a
terrible
term Weathers borrows from Tom Wolfe for a new standalone unit of organization, from one to twenty or thirty sentences long, with no clear transitions from or to surrounding prose. As Wolfe explained the crot, “In the hands of a writer who really understands the device, it will have you making crazy leaps of logic, leaps you never dreamed of before.” Both Wolfe's and Professor X's explanations of the crot, although made some twenty years before the Internet, strike me as nearly perfect descriptions of the units of prose we have already become used to on web pages, a reminder that a Grammar C for electronic text may already be developing beyond Grammar B. (More on this idea in a moment.) Other features would also seem to have obvious analogues in electronic textuality, and indeed, Grammar B anticipated many of the features we now take for granted when we surf the Web or when we suffer through interminable PowerPoint presentations.
Current trends in popular usage and more innovative and descriptive analysis in writing instruction have made the once radical-seeming polemic in favor of a Grammar B seem pretty tame today. A number of the sentence strategies I have presented in this book would once have seemed to belong to the rebellious moves of Grammar B, but are now acceptable and widely practiced in “respectable” writing. Much of what Weathers described as Grammar B has been absorbed into an expanded Grammar A in the nearly fifty years since he published his original “Grammars of Style” essay. However, while Grammar B may have largely won its war with Grammar A, we are now recognizing the emergence and codification of a Grammar C in digital media. Hypertext links, mouse-overs, text wrapped around images, scrolling text rather than pages, print linked to soundâthese and many other features we use daily on the Internet and in electronic presentations all suggest that we have already entered the age of a Grammar C that is specific to multimedia writing. Once again, Richard Lanham is one of the pioneers of describing and analyzing this new digital rhetoric. In his new editions of
Analyzing Prose Style
and in
The Economics of Attention: Style and Substance in the Age of Information
(2007), Lanham lays the foundation for what will be the next stage in rhetorical analysis and a new chapter in the teaching of writing. For now, however, most of us remain more concerned with writing on the page than writing on the screen, and when we do write on the screen it remains the case that
nothing is more important than the sentence.
In this book I've introduced a number of practical approaches to crafting more effectiveâand more enjoyableâsentences. I hope I've also been able to show some of the fascinating issues involved in understanding how our sentences fit into the larger concerns of prose style.
In “A Primer for Teaching Style,” published in the May 1974
College Composition and Communication
, Richard Graves, now professor emeritus of curriculum and teaching at Auburn, describes style as “a way of finding and explaining what is true.” I love that description and I completely agree with Graves when he adds that the purpose of style “is not to impress but to express.” I like to think of style not as a gift that some writers have, something they can show off, but as a gift that they can give away, by passing the truth of their style and the expression of their selves along to readers. In this sense,
style is itself the gift
, passed from writer to writer, from writer to reader, age to age. As Lewis Hyde, in his book
The Gift
, has so brilliantly explained the process of gifting, most indigenous peoples believe that the essence of gift giving is that the gift must remain in motionâthat it must keep moving as it is given again and again, passed from hand to hand. In this important sense, style is indeed a gift that keeps on giving just as it is a gift that can and must be passed along. I hope that through your writing you will pass along to others the gift of style.
Next Steps
Start writing, keep writing, and find some way to share the gift of your writing with others!
The page numbers in this index refer to the printed version of this book. To find the corresponding locations in the text of this digital version, please use the “search” function on your e-reader. Note that not all terms may be searchable.
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“A&P” (Updike), 130â31
Absalom, Absalom!
(Faulkner), 227
Ada
(Nabokov), 214â15
Adams, Henry, 172
addition principle of writing, 57, 58, 75
adjectival strategy to sentence construction, 45, 47, 48â51
Against the Day
(Pynchon), 126â27
Agnew, Spiro, 212
alliteration, 119, 199, 212
An Alternate Style
(Weathers), 244, 250
Altick, Richard D., 192
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay
(Chabon), 165â66
Amis, Kingsley, 172
anadiplosis, 212
Analyzing Prose
(Lanham), 159, 160, 253
anaphora, 208, 212
and
, 44
Anderson, Chris, 48
anticipating questions, 39â40
Aristotle, 123, 144â45, 147, 158â59, 207
“Ars Poetica” (MacLeish), 10
Artful Sentences
(Tufte), 192, 231â32
Arthur Rex
(Berger), 142â43
article leads, 115
as
and
as if
, 121, 127, 130, 136
assonance, 199, 212
asyndeton, 207, 211
Atwood, Margaret, 133
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Bacon, Francis, 208â9, 212, 215
balanced sentences, 184â204
of Churchill, 195â96
balanced sentences (
cont
.)
comparisons made in, 197
construction of, 195â96
criticisms of, 199â200
of Dickens, 184â85
forms of, 199
of Garrett, 185â86
of Gass, 200â202
of Johnson, 197â99
of Kennedy, 195
memorable nature of, 195â97
mini-balances, 218â220
and parallelism, 187â88, 194, 199
and prefab pairings, 196
and serial constructions, 208, 216â18
as suspensive sentences, 175â76
Baldwin, James, 216â17
“Barn Burning” (Faulkner), 16, 54
Barzun, Jacques, 16, 19
base/kernel clauses
definition of, 38, 70
expanding, 39â41
information added to, 44
information modifying, 45
information subordinated to, 44
predictive sentences, 41â43
short kernel sentences, 38â39
and suspensive sentences, 163â64
Beatitudes, 190â91
because
, 44, 131â32, 135, 136
Beckett, Samuel, 201
“The Bells” (Poe), 119
Berger, Thomas, 1, 141, 142â43, 209â10, 236â37, 238â39
Bible, 192
Blake, William, 214
Borges, Jorge Luis, 201
Bourdain, Anthony, 170â71
Breaking the Rules
(Schuster), 247
Buchwald, Art, 173
“The Cadence of English Oratorical Prose” (Croll), 146
Caesar, 30, 206, 207
Carroll, Lewis, 187
Cartesian Linguistics
(Chomsky), 26â27
Chabon, Michael, 165â66
chiasmus, 213
Chomsky, Noam, 26â27, 28
Christensen, Francis
championing of cumulative sentences, xiiâxiii, 48, 55â58, 157â58, 160, 244
on coordinate cumulative sentences, 87
and Erskine, 57â58, 75
on modifiers, 55â56
principles for cumulative sentences, 58â64
on subordinate cumulative sentences, 88
writing students of, 63â64, 101
Churchill, Winston, 20, 176, 177, 187, 195â96, 213
Cicero, 158
Clark, Albert C., 146
Clark, Matthew, 159, 200, 214
Clark, Walter Van Tilburg, 105
Classical Rhetoric for the Modern Student
(Corbett), 244
clauses, 71, 75
“A Clean, Well-Lighted Place” (Hemingway), 17
Cleaver, Eldridge, 212, 213
comma splices, 75
comparisons, 118, 121â23, 197
complex sentences, 21â22, 229
compound sentences, 44
conceptual dualism, 199
conjunctions, 44
connective strategy in sentence construction, 44, 47
Connors, Robert J., 243â46
Conrad, Joseph, 3, 34â36, 112, 124â25
consonance, 199
Constructive Rhetoric
(Hale), 187
Contemporary Essays on Style
(Love and Payne), 217
A Cook's Tour
(Bourdain), 171
coordinate cumulative sentences, 82â83
advantages of, 85â86, 87, 100â102
construction of, 90
digressions from, 104
drawbacks of, 108â9
parallelism in, 103, 109
patterns in, 103â5
repetition in, 103, 109, 113
rhythm of, 105â6
temporal and sequential logic in, 107â8
Copy and Compose
(Weathers and Winchester), 244
Corbett, Edward P. J., 244
“The Craft of Writing” (Erskine), 57
Crazy in Berlin
(Berger), 238â39
Croll, Morris W., 146â47
cumulative sentences, 53â67, 94â117
addition principle of, 58, 75
and adjectival steps, 48
basic construction of, 69
coordinate sentences (
see
coordinate cumulative sentences)
diagramming, 60â61, 64â66, 81â82
and figurative language, 118, 119, 121â23, 125â28
final phrases of, 102â3, 125â130, 135â36
generative nature of, 68â69
levels of generality in, 59â62
cumulative sentences (
cont
.)
logic of, 64â66
loose syntax of, 155
mechanics of, 99
mixed cumulative sentence levels, 85, 89, 91, 111â13
movement principle of, 58â59, 76, 106â7
multiple levels in, 81â82, 101â2
paradigmatic and syntagmatic characteristics of, 80, 81
parts of, 70â75
patterns in, 103â5, 113â15
phrases in, 71â75
and processing of information, 124â25
professionals' use of, 75
and readers, 59, 66, 108â9
reading aloud, 95â99
rhythm of, 53â67, 87, 105â6, 151â53, 188â89
speculative language in, 118, 119â120, 128â130, 135â36, 137â38
subordinate cumulative sentence levels, 86â88, 90, 101, 104, 109â11, 113
and suspensive sentences, 162â63
temporal and sequential logic in, 107â8
texture of, 62â63
Cunningham, Michael, 2
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dangling participles, 77â78
Death in the Afternoon
(Hemingway), 173â74, 229â230
Deford, Frank, 239
DeLillo, Don, 1, 54, 67
density, 36, 62
diagramming sentences, 60â61, 64â66
Dickens, Charles, 184â85
Dictionary of Modern English Usage
(Fowler), 25
Didion, Joan, 128â29, 139, 174â75, 214, 239â240, 241
digital media and Grammar C, 252â53
Dillard, Annie, 172, 212
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The Economics of Attention
(Lanham), 253
education, sentence-based instruction in, 244â46
The Education of Henry Adams
(Adams), 172
effective writing, 14â19, 20, 21â22
Eiseley, Loren, 62â63, 111â12, 235â36
elements of a sentence, 5â7
The Elements of Style
(Strunk and White)
on arrangement of propositions, 30, 34
critiques of, 18
on loose sentences, 156
on omitting needless words, 15â16, 17, 97
on similes, 122â23
on simple and direct writing, 15â16
Elephants of Style
(Walsh), 18
ellipsis pattern in series, 212
embedded propositions, 34â36
Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 208
emotional impact of writing, 34â35, 121â22
emphasis in sentences, 134
Encyclopedia Britannica
, 149
end-focus rhythm pattern, 134
epanalepsis, 213
epistrophe, 208, 213
“The Erasure of the Sentence” (Connors), 243
Erskine, John, 57â58, 75â76
Euphues
(Lyly), 193â94
Farewell to Arms
(Hemingway), 42â43
Faulkner, William, 16â17, 19, 23, 54, 227, 230
Fiction and Figures of Life
(Gass), 200
figurative language, 118, 119, 121â23, 125â28
final phrases, 102â3, 125â130, 135â36
First Blood
(Morrell), 42
Fisher, M. F. K., 173
Fitzgerald, F. Scott, 89, 153, 155â56, 166, 197
for
, 136
Fowler, H. W., 18, 25, 136
Free/Style
(Anderson), 48
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Gass, William, 200â202, 214, 221â25
“A Generative Rhetoric of the Sentence” (Christensen), 55â56
“Gertrude Stein and the Geography of the Sentence” (Gass), 224
gerund phrases, 72â73
Gibson, Walker, 6, 42â43
Gibson, William, 36â37
Goldwater, Barry, 187, 196â97
grammar, 13â24, 246â47, 250â52
Grammar as Style
(Tufte), 50â51
Grammar B, 250â52
“Grammars of Style” (Weathers), 250
Graves, Richard, 253
The Great Gatsby
(Fitzgerald), 89, 153, 155â56, 166
Habitations of the Word
(Gass), 200
Hale, Edward Everett, Jr., 187
Hamlet
(Shakespeare), 168, 175
Handlist of Rhetorical Terms
(Lanham), 194
“Happy Endings” (Atwood), 133
Harbrace College Handbook
, 20, 157, 191
Hayakawa, S. I., 121
Hazlitt, William, 199, 208
Heart of Darkness
(Conrad), 3, 112
Heller, Joseph, 89
Hemingway, Ernest
proficiency of, 19
rhythm of, 53â54
sentence length of, 229â230, 240â41
serial constructions of, 207
and simple and direct writing, 16â17
style of, 23
suspensive sentences of, 173â74
History of English Prose Rhythm
(Saintsbury), 146
Hitchens, Christopher, 172
“The Hunting of the Snark” (Carroll), 187
hyperbole, 119
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if
, 164â65, 176â77
implied propositions, 28â29, 34â36
impressive writing, 14â15, 18â19, 20
individuality in writing, 118, 120, 123, 129â130, 182
infinitive phrases, 73
In the Heart of the Heart of the Country
(Gass), 200
“Inviting the Muses” (Young), 233â34
isocolon, 213
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James, Henry, 22
Johnson, Samuel, 187â88, 193, 197â202, 208, 216
Joyce, James, 104, 105
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Kennedy, George A., 159
Kennedy, John F., 187, 195
King, Martin Luther, Jr., 239
Kinneavy, James, 246
Kittredge, William, 171
Klaus, Carl, 100, 101, 102, 164, 175, 209â10, 248â49
Kolln, Martha, 134
Kronenberger, Louis, 208
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ladder of abstraction, 8â9, 60
Language in Thought and Action
(Hayakawa), 121
Lanham, Richard, 21, 159â161, 194, 215, 249â250, 253
left-branching sentences, 59, 76, 78, 106â7, 165â66
Le Guin, Ursula K., 143, 228â29
length of sentences, 3, 227â231.
See also
long sentences
“Letter from Birmingham Jail” (King), 239
“Letter from the East” (White), 138
Lewis, Sinclair, 88, 92â93
like
, 121, 127â28
Little Big Man
(Berger), 142
“Living Like a Weasel” (Dillard), 212
The Log from the Sea of Cortez
(Steinbeck), 13â14
logos, 139
long sentences, 226â242
base clauses of, 40â41
correcting problems with, 231â33
and master sentences, 227â28, 233â241
variety in, 228â231, 233â37
loose syntax, 155, 156â57, 159, 160, 170
Love, Glen, 217
Lowell, Amy, 150, 151
Lowry, Malcolm, 201
Lyly, John, 188, 193
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Macaulay, Thomas Babington, 199â200, 216
MacLeish, Archibald, 10
Malinowski, Bronislaw, 179â180
Martin, William C., 171
master sentences, 227â28, 233â241
A Matter of Style
(Clark), 159, 200
McAuliffe, Anthony, 2, 38
meaning, 9â10, 23
Memento Mori
(Spark), 51
Memoirs
(Amis), 172
metaphors, 119, 121, 122, 199
mid-branching modifiers, 76, 78
“Midnight in Dostoevsky” (DeLillo), 67
Miles, Josephine, 45â47, 48, 76, 151â52, 245
mini-balances, 218â220
mini-scripting, 176â182
mixed cumulative sentence levels, 85, 89, 91, 111â13
Modern English Usage
(Fowler), 18, 136
modes of progression in prose, 45â48
modifying words or phrases
and adjectival strategy, 44, 45
article leads in, 115
Christensen on, 56
clauses compared to, 75
containing verbals, 71â72
definition of, 71
direction provided by, 58â59, 76, 79
Erskine on primacy of, 57â58, 76
final phrases, 102â3, 125â130, 135â36
free modifiers, 32â33, 48â51, 56â57, 76, 106â8
gerund phrases, 72â73
infinitive phrases, 73
levels of generality in, 59â62
misplaced modifiers, 77â79
mixed cumulative sentence levels, 85, 89, 91
multiple levels of, 101â2
participial phrases, 72, 74
modifying words or phrases (
cont
.)
prepositional phrases, 73
and relative clauses, 50