Plain Words

Author(s): Ernest Gowers

Reference

'Be short, be simple, be human.' When Sir Ernest Gowers first wrote Plain Words, it was intended simply as a guide to the proper use of English for the Civil Service. Within a year, however, its humour, charm and authority had made it a bestseller. Since then it has never been out of print. Six decades on, writer Rebecca Gowers has created a new edition of this now-classic work that both revises and celebrates her great-grandfather's original. Plain Words has been updated to reflect numerous changes in English usage, yet Sir Ernest's distinctive, witty voice is undimmed. And his message remains vital: our writing should be as clear and comprehensible as possible, avoiding superfluous words and cliches - from the jargon of 'commercialese' to the murky euphemisms of politicians. In a new preface, this edition draws on an extensive private archive, previously hidden away in family cupboards and attics, to tell the story behind a book that has become an institution: the essential guide to making yourself understood.


Product Information

Gowers's main precepts are as sensible today as they were when he first presented them ... beneficial, intelligent and sympathetic -- David Crystal Rebecca Gowers has been charged with the task of producing a version which is true to the spirit of the original but adapted to the needs of the 21st century. She discharges this task with wit and delicacy -- Stefan Collini Prospect Over half a century after Plain Words was first published, its principles are as important as ever: say what you mean in the clearest possible fashion. Rebecca Gowers has done a great job ... superb -- Caroline Taggart Vastly informative and indispensable -- Bill Bryson One thing that makes Gowers such an engaging figure is that he isn't prissy, priggish or prim. As far as he is concerned, language is a living thing that is constantly changing - and this is just as it should be Sunday Telegraph Itself a model of how plain words should be used Telegraph The zeal with which Sir Ernest uncovers error is matched only by the wit with which he chastises it Evening Standard The great Sir Ernest Gowers ... the grand old boy himself -- Lynne Truss I am glad that attention should be continually drawn to copies of this book ... I am in full sympathy with the doctrine laid down by Sir Ernest Gowers -- Sir Winston Churchill A small literary jewel Evening News A delight, a classic of its kind John o'London's Weekly Great fun to read Economist Brilliant New Statesman A sweetly reasonable and wholly admirable guide The Times It will delight far wider circles than those to whom it is primarily addressed Observer

Sir Ernest Gowers was born in 1880, and became a leading civil servant. He ran the civil defence of London during the Second World War, chaired the Royal Commission into Capital Punishment whose 1953 report contributed significantly to ending the death penalty in Britain, wrote the bestseller, Plain Words, and later became the first editor of H. W. Fowler's classic Dictionary of Modern English Usage. Rebecca Gowers studied English at Oxford and Cambridge. She is the author of The Swamp of Death, shortlisted for the CWA nonfiction Golden Dagger Award, and of two novels, When to Walk and The Twisted Heart, both longlisted for the Orange Prize.

General Fields

  • : 9780141975535
  • : Penguin Books Ltd
  • : Particular Books
  • : 0.403
  • : 01 March 2014
  • : 204mm X 138mm X 30mm
  • : United Kingdom
  • : 01 June 2014
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Ernest Gowers
  • : Hardback
  • : 1406
  • : 428
  • : 320