A joyous hymn of praise to the English language, including its history and the writers, from Shakespeare to Orwell, who shaped it. Richard Lederer’s most luminous work.
Master verbalist Richard Lederer, America’s “Wizard of Idiom” (Denver Post), presents a love letter to the most glorious of human achievements.
Welcome to Richard Lederer’s beguiling celebration of language — of our ability to utter, write, and receive words. No purists need stop here. Dr. Lederer is no linguistic sheriff organizing posses to hunt down and string up language offenders. Instead, join him “In Praise of English,” and discover why the tongue described in Shakespeare’s day as “of small reatch” has become the most widely spoken language in history:
He also points out the pitfalls and pratfalls of English. If a man mans a station, what does a woman do? In the “The Department of Redundancy Department,” “Is English Prejudiced?” and other essays, Richard Lederer urges us not to abandon that which makes us human: the capacity to distinguish, discriminate, compare, and evaluate.
Welcome to the website woven for wordaholics, logolepts, and verbivores. Carnivores eat meat; herbivores eat plants and vegetables; verbivores devour words. If you are heels over head (as well as head over heels) in love with words, tarry here a while to graze or, perhaps, feast on the English language. Ours is the only language in which you drive in a parkway and park in a driveway and your nose can run and your feet can smell.