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The Sense of Style: The Thinking Person's Guide to Writing in the 21st Century Paperback – September 22, 2015

4.5 out of 5 stars 2,297 ratings

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“Charming and erudite," from the author of Rationality and Enlightenment Now, "The wit and insight and clarity he brings . . . is what makes this book such a gem.” —Time.com
 
Why is so much writing so bad, and how can we make it better? Is the English language being corrupted by texting and social media? Do the kids today even care about good writing—and why should we care? From the author of
The Better Angels of Our Nature and Enlightenment Now.

In this entertaining and eminently practical book, the cognitive scientist, dictionary consultant, and
New York Times–bestselling author Steven Pinker rethinks the usage guide for the twenty-first century. Using examples of great and gruesome modern prose while avoiding the scolding tone and Spartan tastes of the classic manuals, he shows how the art of writing can be a form of pleasurable mastery and a fascinating intellectual topic in its own right. The Sense of Style is for writers of all kinds, and for readers who are interested in letters and literature and are curious about the ways in which the sciences of mind can illuminate how language works at its best.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

Praise for The Sense of Style
 “[
The Sense of Style] is more contemporary and comprehensive than “The Elements of Style,” illustrated with comic strips and cartoons and lots of examples of comically bad writing. [Pinker’s] voice is calm, reasonable, benign, and you can easily see why he’s one of Harvard’s most popular lecturers.”
The New York Times
 
“Pinker's linguistical learning…is considerable. His knowledge of grammar is extensive and runs deep. He also takes a scarcely hidden delight in exploding tradition. He describes his own temperament as "both logical and rebellious." Few things give him more pleasure than popping the buttons off what he takes to be stuffed shirts.”
The Wall Street Journal
 
“[W]hile 
The Sense of Style is very much a practical guide to clear and compelling writing, it’s also far more…. In the end, Pinker’s formula for good writing is pretty basic: write clearly, try to follow the rules most of the time—but only the when they make sense. It’s neither rocket science nor brain surgery. But the wit and insight and clarity he brings to that simple formula is what makes this book such a gem.”
Time.com
 
“Erudite and witty… With its wealth of helpful information and its accessible approach,
The Sense of Style is a worthy addition to even the most overburdened shelf of style manuals.”
Shelf Awareness
 
“Forget Strunk and White’s rules—cognitive science is a surer basis for clear and cogent writing, according to this iconoclastic guide from bestselling Harvard psycholinguist Pinker... Every writer can profit from—and every writer can enjoy—Pinker’s analysis of the ways in which skillfully chosen words engage the mind.”
Publishers Weekly (starred)
 
“Yet another how-to book on writing? Indeed, but this is one of the best to come along in many years, a model of intelligent signposting and syntactical comportment…Pinker's vade mecum is a worthy addition to any writer’s library.”
Kirkus Reviews
 
“In this witty and practical book on the art of writing, Pinker applies insights from the sciences of language and mind to the crafting of clear, elegant prose: #requiredreading.”
Publishers Weekly, PW pick Fall 2014 Announcements
 
“Who better than a best-selling linguist and cognitive scientist to craft a style guide showing us how to use language more effectively?”
Library Journal
 
“[A] dense, fascinating analysis of the many ways communication can be stymied by word choice, placement, stress, and the like. [Pinker’s] explanations run rich and deep, complemented by lists, cartoons, charts on diagramming sentences, and more.”
Booklist
 
“This book is a graceful and clear smackdown to the notion that English is going to the proverbial dogs. Pinker has written the Strunk & White for a new century while continuing to discourage baseless notions such as that the old slogan should have been ‘Winston tastes good AS a cigarette should.’”
—John McWhorter, author of
Our Magnificent Bastard Tongue and The Power of Babel
 
“Great stuff! Only Steven Pinker could have written this marvelous book, and thank heaven he has. ‘Good writing can flip the way the world is perceived,’ he writes, and
The Sense of Style will flip the way you think about good writing. Pinker’s curiosity and delight illuminate every page, and when he says style can make the world a better place, we believe him.”
 —Patricia T. O’Conner, author of Woe Is I and, with Stewart Kellerman, Origins of the Specious
 

About the Author

Steven Pinker is the Johnstone Professor of Psychology at Harvard University. He has been listed among Foreign Policy magazine’s “Top 100 Public Intellectuals” and Time’s “The 100 Most Influential People in the World.” He was the chair of the Usage Panel of The American Heritage Dictionary 2008-2018.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Penguin Books
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ September 22, 2015
  • Edition ‏ : ‎ Reprint
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 368 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0143127799
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0143127796
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.31 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.3 x 0.7 x 8 inches
  • Lexile measure ‏ : ‎ 1260L
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 out of 5 stars 2,297 ratings

About the author

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Steven Pinker
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Steven Pinker is one of the world's leading authorities on language and the mind. His popular and highly praised books include The Stuff of Thought, The Blank Slate, Words and Rules, How the Mind Works, and The Language Instinct. The recipient of several major awards for his teaching, books, and scientific research, Pinker is Harvard College Professor and Johnstone Family Professor of Psychology at Harvard University. He also writes frequently for The New York Times, Time, The New Republic, and other magazines.

Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
2,297 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book's writing quality excellent, with clear explanations of grammar and psychology, and one customer notes how it makes texts more readable and engaging. Moreover, they appreciate its readability, describing it as a delightful read, and value its usefulness as a reference guide. Additionally, the book receives praise for its humor, with customers noting its amusing examples, and one customer mentions it makes them laugh out loud on almost every page.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

179 customers mention "Writing quality"141 positive38 negative

Customers praise the book's writing style, noting its eloquent prose and detailed examination of grammar. They appreciate the psychological insights into effective communication, with one customer highlighting how it makes texts more readable and engaging, while another mentions how it guides readers through complex language concepts.

"...Pinker’s basic point here is that syntax is our tool for putting organization to thought and, moreover, that thinking about sentences as structured..." Read more

"...is that far beyond being for seasoned or budding writers, this wonderful text is equally for fans of his other investigations of human logic and..." Read more

"...7. Supports good style over writing dogma. "The key to good style, far more than obeying any list of commandments, is to have a clear conception..." Read more

"...Pinker uses the logic of expression, an historical view of changes in language, and an ACTUAL definition of style to offer up a thoughtful book that..." Read more

143 customers mention "Readability"134 positive9 negative

Customers find the book delightful to read and interesting, with one customer noting that the first couple of chapters were particularly good.

"...showing the value of simply thinking through what works in writing—strong starts, fresh idioms and diction, occasional playfulness, use of rhythm..." Read more

"...on the planet won't keep you reading if the author isn't fun, delicious, and adept at keeping readers continuously engaged, even with deep topics..." Read more

"...editor, and inventories of common errors in student papers." Great stuff. 18. Includes notes, glossary and a formal bibliography...." Read more

"Brilliant...." Read more

137 customers mention "Insight"131 positive6 negative

Customers find the book insightful and useful as a reference guide, with one customer noting how well it explains tough concepts and another highlighting its wealth of information on correct grammar.

"...of simply thinking through what works in writing—strong starts, fresh idioms and diction, occasional playfulness, use of rhythm and meter, attention..." Read more

"...and adept at keeping readers continuously engaged, even with deep topics and analysis. And there's the rub...." Read more

"...2. A "very" unique topic, the art of writing well from a scientific perspective. You don't have to read the book to get my joke. 3...." Read more

"...in language, and an ACTUAL definition of style to offer up a thoughtful book that presents and exemplifies clear, simple and accurate expression...." Read more

34 customers mention "Humor"34 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the book's humor, particularly its amusing examples and deadpan wit, with one customer mentioning they laugh out loud on almost every page.

"...what works in writing—strong starts, fresh idioms and diction, occasional playfulness, use of rhythm and meter, attention to the reader’s vantage..." Read more

"...You don't have to read the book to get my joke. 3. Good use of wit that adds panache to a book about writing style. 4...." Read more

"...Also marvelous for its humor, using cartoons as well as references to The Princess Bride, Spinal Tap and Monty Python as suitable examples...." Read more

"...Pinker calls this "deadpan wit, an affection for eccentricity, and a deft use of the English lexicon," but Jesus, where does one even begin in..." Read more

7 customers mention "Eye-catching"7 positive0 negative

Customers find the book eye-catching, with one mentioning it provides a useful look under the hood and another noting its practical approach.

"...This is because, while quite stark and eye-catching, on the `pro' side, it is paired with an utterly shallow insight -- the very definition of "..." Read more

"...Pinker takes a practical approach, governed by a sensible appreciation of current usage, constantly emphasizing that English is a developing language..." Read more

"...Yet, it is a page-turner, written with such elegance and verve that it rises to the level of literature...." Read more

"Pinker is brilliant and I bet he had a heckuva good time writing this book...." Read more

If you write, you should read Pinker's Sense of Style
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on November 27, 2014
    Steven Pinker’s <I>The Sense of Style</I> fits into the tradition of style guides that began with Fowler and continues up through Bryan Garner. It will inevitably be compared with Willard Stunk and E. B. White’s <I>Elements of Style</I>, that sputnik-era Seussification of grammar and style. But the real comparison is with Joseph Williams’s excellent, but somewhat dated, book <I>Style: Towards Clarity and Grace</I>, one of the first works to blend linguistics and style. Pinker adopts and updates some of Williams’s insights (with all due acknowledgment of course) and connect them even more closely to current research in psycholinguistics and grammar.

    Chapters 1-3 warm the reader up, with Pinker’s characteristic charm and good humor. In Chapter 1, “Good Writing,” Pinker reverse engineers (as he puts it) several examples of clear exposition, showing the value of simply thinking through what works in writing—strong starts, fresh idioms and diction, occasional playfulness, use of rhythm and meter, attention to the reader’s vantage point.

    Chapter 2, “A Window on the World,” bring in the work of Francis-Noël Thomas and Mark Turner (in their book <I>Clear and Simple as the Truth</I>) which defines “the classic style.” That is the style which draws its strength from the writer’s helping the reader see the world in a new way. Strong writers show the informed reader with narrative, explanation and examples that meet the readers where they are. That is opposed of course to the academic (and especially post-modern style) and Pinker finds no dearth of examples to illustrate the difference.

    In Chapter 3, “The Curse of Knowledge,” Pinker explains the problem of specialists who are unable to see the world as their readers see it and thus over-complicate their prose with jargon, nominalizations, abbreviations, unexplained assumptions, and other insider shortcuts.

    Chapter 4 “The Web, The Tree, and the String” is a long chapter (really, it’s pages 76-138) on syntax. Pinker’s basic point here is that syntax is our tool for putting organization to thought and, moreover, that thinking about sentences as structured entities (modelled by tree diagrams) rather than simple flat strings of words can give us a richer outlook on many problems of style. It’s a fine chapter for linguists, but general readers may struggle a bit here. As more than one readers has noted, here Pinker himself seems to fall victim to the curse of knowledge.

    Chapter 5 “Arcs of Coherence” is another long chapter (pages 139-186) in which Pinker shows how writers build (or don’t build) coherence in sentences and paragraphs. Coherence involves carefully attending to the reader’s knowledge and to the pattern a writer develops through parallelism, consistency of diction, integration new ideas into ones just introduced, and continual focus on the point of the prose.

    Chapter 6, “Telling Right from Wrong,” is not so much a chapter as a separate style guide making up about a third of the book. Here Pinker gleefully takes on many the traditional rules and folk rules of English grammar, separating them into broad categories of grammar; quantity, quality and degree; diction; and punctuation. He explains, refines or corrects the traditional takes on grammar, doing so in a way will warm the heart of anyway who has ever been scolded by an ignoramus and capture the interest of the open-minded. Don’t skip the style guide; it’s got some gems on <I>fewer</I> vs. <I>less</i>, restrictive and non-restrictive, fused participles, and the use of commas.

    <I>The Sense of Style</I> has a few flaws (the curse of knowledge, for one) and it might have been shorter in chapters 4 and 5. But overall it is a fine book, well written and well thought out, by someone who not only cares about language but cares about the facts.
    12 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on October 1, 2014
    Rabid fans of Pinker (like me) will NOT be disappointed with this book! It would be a mistake to assume all the Strunk and White, Elements of Style stuff promoted by the publisher in some way limits this gem of a book to writers and writing. What we love about Pinker: -- assuming his readers are bright -- covering potentially "boring" topics like linguistics as they relate to cognition in can't-put-it-down fashion -- getting into the underlying mechanics of and with deep analysis, logic and example dissection, (among many others) are all here in abundance.

    Like his other books, this wonderful text is a page turner. His usual sense of both humility and astonishment both abound. How can a topic as potentially dry as writing style carry that kind of tide? Many answers, but one is the quality of examples. In typical Pinker style, Steven gives an example (for instance, one of my favorites, Keegan and Clausewitz on war, p. 170), initially goes along with the abundant praise of style and logic, then in his typical brilliant yet childlike fashion, says, "Wait a minute?" and dissects the logic with the honed scalpel we're used to seeing in his neuro and linguistics masterpieces. And how nontrivial (given the news) is a topic like why humans go to war? My point is that far beyond being for seasoned or budding writers, this wonderful text is equally for fans of his other investigations of human logic and choice, as well as a general touchstone for all readers in analytically evaluating what they are reading.

    I'm not saying that the audience for this work isn't writers, but if you sat as an observer in a brilliant writing class given by not just a brilliant writer and author, but also linguist and cognitive scientist, you'd be taking copious notes on the astonishing depth and subtlety of cognitive errors that truly refined analysis produces. Some of the life changing twists and turns in interpretation and style read more like a detective story than a how to manual. But of course-- lead by example-- all the knowledge on the planet won't keep you reading if the author isn't fun, delicious, and adept at keeping readers continuously engaged, even with deep topics and analysis.

    And there's the rub. It's tough enough to write a good novel, but how do you write about, say, science, in an engaging way? This isn't a Monday morning analyst, or a bleachers expert, it is a recursive, here's what it's about, how it's done, and oh, by the way, you're IN it right now author. Frankly, I do analysis at the code level in programming and bio/ robotics and am far from a language expert (but do see its reflection in category theory, for example), so I have to "study" rather than read Pinker's books. How does he manage to "lead me along" with a page turner style, even though I keep stopping to re-read and look up his concepts? Not exactly sure, but am a little closer to the answer now. Highly recommended!
    16 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Antonio Parente Jr
    5.0 out of 5 stars It will take your writing to a whole new level
    Reviewed in Brazil on September 11, 2024
    Every writer (aspiring and seasoned) must give Pinker's book a try. I gave and I'm glad I did. Will you?
  • Tim
    5.0 out of 5 stars For aspiring writers and readers interested in writing style.
    Reviewed in Japan on April 12, 2020
    For anyone looking to improve her scribbling style, or just interested in remembering what makes good writing good, this book is a fascinating and informative read.

    Initially drawn to Mr Pinker after reading a very different book-Enlightenment Now!-I found myself intrigued by one that takes us more specifically into his areas of expertise. Having made his name in the study of cognitive psycholinguistics, it is only natural that Steven Pinker should give us a book devoted-as were our old style manuals from our uni days-to showing the reader how to employ tried-and-true writing techniques, as well as encouraging us, as we write, to challenge some of the old conventions of writing style and structure.

    Mr Pinker provides numerous examples of writing, from the very bad to the exceptional, and illustrates how to avoid the usual traps of wordiness and sloppy style.

    A worthwhile primer or a reminder, wherever you may be in your writing stages.
  • amazon4rkb
    5.0 out of 5 stars A fine contemporary style guide
    Reviewed in India on April 5, 2022
    A fine contemporary style guide

    There are books which the blurb on the back cover calls 'unputdownable'. Then there are books to be worked at. This is one of those. If you want a relaxed read through the elements of classic writing style, this is not for you.

    However Steven Pinker's work is delightful in a different way. It goes beyond the borders of grammar; and the play of words, the turn of phrase and the subtle humour make the plough worth it.

    The best parts are where he analyzes the debatable issues and shows you how different senses of a word/phrase make certain exceptions possible ('very unique' is acceptable in certain cases, 𝘦.𝘨.).

    Pick it up when you have plenty of days at hand for it's not a work to be finished in one sitting.

    But yes, the dividends are rich, once you go through it. You get clarity on a number of doubts (you were afraid to ask).

    After I got it for my Kindle ereader, I ordered a hard copy as well as I realized its worth as a reference manual.

    📚📖📓
    Customer image
    amazon4rkb
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    A fine contemporary style guide

    Reviewed in India on April 5, 2022
    A fine contemporary style guide

    There are books which the blurb on the back cover calls 'unputdownable'. Then there are books to be worked at. This is one of those. If you want a relaxed read through the elements of classic writing style, this is not for you.

    However Steven Pinker's work is delightful in a different way. It goes beyond the borders of grammar; and the play of words, the turn of phrase and the subtle humour make the plough worth it.

    The best parts are where he analyzes the debatable issues and shows you how different senses of a word/phrase make certain exceptions possible ('very unique' is acceptable in certain cases, 𝘦.𝘨.).

    Pick it up when you have plenty of days at hand for it's not a work to be finished in one sitting.

    But yes, the dividends are rich, once you go through it. You get clarity on a number of doubts (you were afraid to ask).

    After I got it for my Kindle ereader, I ordered a hard copy as well as I realized its worth as a reference manual.

    📚📖📓
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    Customer image
  • Gianni Da Re Lombardi
    5.0 out of 5 stars Lettura interessante per chi scrive professionalmente
    Reviewed in Italy on October 10, 2023
    Alcuni capitoli sono troppo tecnici per il lettore comune, ovvero il non specialista in linguistica.

    Offre comunque interessanti e utili approfondimenti per chi scrive di professione, si tratti di un giornalista, uno scrittore o un lavoratore intellettuale che ogni tanto produce documenti scritti che abbiano l'obiettivo di farsi comprendere.
    Report
  • Miguel de la Ferrelle
    5.0 out of 5 stars Recomendable
    Reviewed in Mexico on January 6, 2021
    Excelente libro. Muy recomendable