Benjamin Dreyer is vice president, executive managing editor and copy chief, of Random House. He began his publishing career as a freelance proofreader and copy editor. In 1993, he became a production editor at Random House, overseeing books by writers including Michael Chabon, Edmund Morris, Suzan-Lori Parks, Michael Pollan, Peter Straub, and Calvin Trillin. He has copyedited books by authors including E. L. Doctorow, David Ebershoff, Frank Rich, and Elizabeth Strout, as well as Let Me Tell You,a volume of previously uncollected work by Shirley Jackson. A graduate of Northwestern University, he lives in New York City.
“Interwoven with cultural history and lively self-revelation, this
bracing manual will up your game even if all you’re writing is
emails.”—People (Book of the Week)
“Call it the hedonic appeal. Dreyer beckons readers by showing that
his rules make prose pleasurable. . . . His book is in love with
the toothsomeness of language. Its sentences capture writing’s
physicality.”—Katy Waldman, The New Yorker
“Brimming with wit and revelatory wisdom, this style
manual-cum-linguistic jubilee from Random House’s copy chief . . .
entertains as it enlightens.”—O: The Oprah Magazine
“Random House copy chief and managing editor Benjamin Dreyer is a
fixture in the publishing industry and on Twitter for his
authoritative yet approachable take on style and grammar. Now he is
a Random House author himself. . . . Dreyer’s English [is] a
helpful, funny style guide replete with supporting references from
literature and popular culture.”—New York
“An utterly delightful book to read, Dreyer’s English will stand
among the classics on how to use the English language
properly.”—Elizabeth Strout
“A mind-blower—sure to jumpstart any writing project, just by
exposing you, the writer, to Dreyer’s astonishing level of
sentence-awareness.”—George Saunders
“Farewell, Strunk and White. Benjamin Dreyer’s brilliant,
pithy, incandescently intelligent book is to contemporary writing
what Geoffrey Chaucer’s poetry was to medieval English: a gift that
broadens and deepens the art and the science of literature by
illustrating that convention should not stand in the way of
creativity, so long as that creativity is expressed with clarity
and with conviction.”—Jon Meacham
“It is Benjamin Dreyer’s intense love for the English language and
his passion for the subject that make the experience of reading
Dreyer’s English such a pleasure, almost regardless of the
invaluable and practical purpose his book serves in such dark and
confusing times for grammar and meaning.”—Ayelet Waldman & Michael
Chabon
“If Oscar Wilde had wanted to be helpful as well as brilliant, if
E. B. White and Noël Coward had had a wonderful little boy who grew
up to cherish and model clarity, the result would be Benjamin
Dreyer and his frankly perfect book. Anyone who writes anything
should have a copy by their computer, and perhaps another on the
nightstand, just for pleasure.”—Amy Bloom
“Dreyer’s English is essential to anyone who cares about language.
It’s as smart and funny as Dreyer is himself. He makes you smile
and makes you smarter at the same time.”—Lyle Lovett
“Like Dreyer himself, this book reassures as it teaches. The reader
never feels spoken down to, as in so many other style guides, but
is instead lifted up, inspired to communicate with more clarity and
zing. I’ll be buying this for friends.”—Brian Koppelman, co-creator
and showrunner of Billions
“This work is that rare writing handbook that writers might
actually want to read straight through, rather than simply
consult.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
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