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Sin Boldly! Dr. Dave's Guide to Writing the College Paper
 
 
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Sin Boldly! Dr. Dave's Guide to Writing the College Paper [Paperback]

Dave Williams (Author), David R. Williams (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)


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Paperback, January 15, 2000 --  

Book Description

January 15, 2000
Tired of correcting the same mistakes year after year, hoarse from endless repetition of the same rules, at long last frustrated by the inability of students to grasp his words of wisdom, Professor David Williams has put it all down in a book: the dirty truth about what college professors and other teachers are really looking for as they grade student papers. Outrageous and wise, Sin Boldly! goes where no other how-to-write handbook has dared go before. Personal, perceptive, and purposefully provocative, this book offers students crucial advice on the entire writing process. From choosing a paper topic to adopting a persuasive voice, shaping an argument, and organizing an essay; from political correctness (or lack thereof) to matters of style, punctuation, and usage, Sin Boldly! is crammed with information, ideas, and examples that will entertain and instruct even the most confident students in their quest for the A+ they all think they deserve.


Editorial Reviews

Review

"Sin Boldly offers students the kind of insight we all hope they will acquire during their time with us, but which most of them, unfortunately, never do. Stop lamenting over those bits of wisdom you wish you'd written down - they're all here. Dr. Dave's book is witty and irreverent, and that means students will actually read it. Assign it in your courses, and your students will thank you." -- August McCarthy, Adjunct Professor of English Composition, George Mason University

"A must-read for anyone intimidated by writing assignments." -- Former 98 pound weakling

"A smart, sassy, and original approach to acing the college paper." -- "3.8" college student

"A traitor to his generation, Dr Dave reveals to us X'ers what the academic boomers are trying to pull." -- Reformed Hacker

"Dr Dave is the brat who pointed out that the emperor has no clothes." -- Thankful student

"Dr. Dave is full of excellent advice for students and professionals. I recommend it to my students and use it myself." -- Eliza McCormack, Editor and Lecturer, Cambridge Center for Adult Education

"Essential reading for any student stymied by a writing assignment." -- Perplexed Parent

"This little book cuts through the digested grasses left behind by the old bulls who run America's English departments with clear, entertaining, and practical advice....Sin Boldly! renders the teaching of composition redundant. It should be banned from bookstores, libraries, and course curricula." -- James Stripes, Ph.D., Adjunct Instructor, Whitworth College

"Writer's block? Here's how to get around it!" -- Former blockhead

About the Author

David R. Williams, a.k.a. Dr. Dave, earned a Masters at Harvard Divinity School trying to figure out the meaning of the word "God," and a Ph.D. in American Civilization at Brown University, where his weekly newspaper column offended every faction on campus. He teaches full-time as a part-time English professor at George Mason University, where he was honored with the 2000 Teaching Excellence Award. He lives in Swampoodle, Virginia. Visit his web site at www.sinboldly.com.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 202 pages
  • Publisher: Basic Books; 1st edition (January 15, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 073820370X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0738203706
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 5.6 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,997,545 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Baby boomer David R Williams, born in Boston in 1949, experienced the 60s up close and personal. Taking 1968 off before entering college, he shipped out in the merchant marine, fought against the Vietnam War, worked to elect McCarthy president, rioted in Grant Park, and arrived at Harvard in time to take part in the campus take over.
He later earned a Masters in Theology from Harvard Divinity School and a PhD in American Civilization from Brown. He wrote Wilderness Lost and Sin Boldly! and won the "Excellence In Teaching" Award at George Mason University. He was a Fulbright Scholar in Czechoslovakia in 1991, has two sons, Nathan and Sam, and lives in semi-rural Virginia in a former black community, "Swampoodle," where he brews his own bitter beer.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

27 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Relax, and do it!, July 12, 2000
By 
This review is from: Sin Boldly! Dr. Dave's Guide to Writing the College Paper (Paperback)
The academic world ready for a new approach to tackling the traditional problems of English composition, and the business world is on the brink of degenerating into a sterile environment of catch-phrases and e-terms that slam the door shut on creativity and turn potential clients into sleepy-eyed techno-drones. There is a beast within you who wants to write, and David Williams' new and irreverent book, Sin Boldly, will reach into your bestupored brain and pull out the impressive abilities of composition which you never knew you had.

Shortly after Walt Whitman composed his famous book of poetry, Leaves of Grass, he commented on the influence of his hero, Ralph Waldo Emerson, "I was simmering, simmering, then Emerson brought me to a boil!" This is exactly how I felt after a semester with David Williams, and it is the result that many aspiring writers will undoubtedly experience after digesting the lessons of Sin Boldly.

The main point of Sin Boldly is that you must abandon your inhibitions, forget the tyrannical instructors who tried to mold your prose in the past. Writing is an iterative process, the first stage of which is exposition. How you expose your points sets the pace for the rest of the process and the final composition.

David Williams educational credits include a degree from Harvard Divinity School and Ph. D from Brown College in American Studies. He is a seasoned expert on American culture and possesses a unique talent for bringing out the suppressed literary skills that we all have. He is one of the rare educators who belong to an elite corps of literary intellectuals who have abandoned the snobbery of departmental politics to dedicate his career toward teaching english composition college undergraduates. I was fortunate to have Dr. Williams for one of the first classes toward earning my masters degree in English literature. He set me free from the fetters of conventional paper composition that had been drilled into my head throughout my collegiate career. He has an entertaining and provacative style in his teaching that comes across remarkably intact in his writing. He makes you want to write.

The point is writing is easy. It is something to be enjoyed, not dreaded. You don't have to be an English student to enjoy composition, either. Whether you are composing an e-mail or writing a proposal for a multi-million dollar telecommunications venture, writing your words should be as easy and natural as thinking them, with the added gratification of being able to see them on paper.

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23 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Don't judge a book by its content., April 11, 2001
By 
This review is from: Sin Boldly! Dr. Dave's Guide to Writing the College Paper (Paperback)
This is a potentially useful book to the student writer who discovers it on his own and therefore has no reason not to buy into its solid, commonsensical advice. There's nothing new here--Strunk&White directives, concisely expressed tips about brainstorming and revising, admonitions about cliched language and ignoring the conventions of grammar, punctuation and citation form. The strength of the book is the author's personal voice, logical reasoning disguised as irreverent defiance of the academic establishment, and invocation of countless examples from pop culture (the Simpsons to Monica Lewinsky), literature (a definite bias toward Melville), philosophy (Derrida and the post-modernists), and theology (Luther--the source of the book's title).

While most of the author's points are on target, some may question his failure to distinguish between "opinion" and "idea," especially in the context of exhorting student writers to use the medium to trust and express their opinions ("Here I stand"). It's one thing to "sin boldly," the better to experience a state of despair and to be open to divine grace. But the gain in writing flagrantly bad somehow eludes this reader.

Certainly the text is too spare to be of any use as a "Handbook," but as a "Rhetoric" it succeeds remarkably well in its first half in addressing the constant student refrain: "Is this what you want, Professor?" (I want what you want when you might have cause to be proud of yourself for having wanted it in the first place.) By so overtly taking the student's "side," the author conveys a responsible writing instructor's agenda in a manner that allows the student to view it as privileged information.

In the latter half of the book, I'm afraid the author grinds a few too many personal axes--taking on the deconstructionists and postmodern types, for example--and strays too far from the matter at hand to hold, let alone influence, his audience. In some respects, the author's purpose becomes suspect (cf. David Foster Wallace's "display" piece on grammar and usage in Harper's, 4/2001). And the book ends in an eerily preachy style.

The loud, naughty cover and penchant for scatological language (admittedly a potential turn-off for delicate sensibilities) help atone for the book's didacticism and moralizing as do the moments of refreshing candor (Ronald Reagan didn't know what he was talking about, George Will can at least write effective essays, etc). The price is right, so you can read or assign the first half of the book and ignore the rest.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Personal, perceptive, and purposefully provocative...goes where no other ... handbook has dared go before.", July 17, 2007
By 
A Reader (California USA) - See all my reviews
My favorite part of this book was an actual student paper that David Williams used as an example: "Women are Like Boxcars: A study of the Cinderella myth. ... They are just writing around waiting to get hitched."

Here's what Dr. Williams (And this Dr. comes from a Ph.D. from Harvard no less) says about this paper:

"The paper reproduced in this section is a real one. That is to say, it was written not by me--I swear!--but by a student in one of my college composition classes. Mr. Beard, the student author, is a respresentative of that pervasive sourthern species... Only kudzu, honeysuckle, and poison ivy are more resistant to cultivation... Over six feet and built like a refrigerator, he was the type of guy who causes the tractor to tilt when he climbs on... His papers tended to smell of the stuff he had clinging to his boots when he stomped into class. But they also had a distinctive voice, an enviable clarity, straightforward logic, good organization, and fair to virtuous grammar. What is more, given the political atmosphere in acadmeia today, he took dangerous risks. Horrified though I sometimes was at the content of his essays, I had to love them."
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Let's admit from the start that by "college paper" we mean a paper for a course in the humanities. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
average asshole, sin boldly, topic paragraph
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Moby Dick, United States, Robert Frost, New Critics, New England, Jonathan Edwards, Works Cited, Huckleberry Finn, Washington Post, Civil War, African Americans, Air Force, Emily Dickinson, Nurse Ratched, First Cause, Huck Finn, New York Times, George Bush, Great Depression, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Jacques Derrida, James Baldwin, New Critical, Snowy Evening, White House
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