<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>"This all-in-one reference is a quick and easy way for book, magazine, online, academic, and business writers to look up sticky punctuation questions for all styles including AP (Associated Press), MLA (Modern Language Association), APA (American Psychological Association), and Chicago Manual of Style. These days, writers wear many different hats: they write magazine and news articles, sales copy, online newsletters, books, and reports. It's hard to keep the punctuation style rules for each one straight--until now. This comprehensive reference from grammar guru June Casagrande is organized by punctuation type to give writers quick answers no matter what they're writing for. The Best Punctuation Book, Period provides clear answers to common questions about hyphenation, commas, apostrophes, numbers, and italics; a Punctuation A to Z section addressing commonly confused terms in one master list; and rulings from an expert Punctuation Panel on gray areas. With this resource in hand, writers will be able to craft polished, appropriate prose for every job in a flash"--<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><b>This all-in-one reference is a quick and easy way for book, magazine, online, academic, and business writers to look up sticky punctuation questions for all styles including AP (Associated Press), MLA (Modern Language Association), APA (American Psychological Association), and Chicago Manual of Style.</b> <p/>Punctuate with Confidence--No Matter the Style <p/> Confused about punctuation? There's a reason. Everywhere you turn, publications seem to follow different rules on everything from possessive apostrophes to hyphens to serial commas. Then there are all the gray areas of punctuation--situations the rule books gloss over or never mention at all. At last, help has arrived. <p/> This complete reference guide from grammar columnist June Casagrande covers the basic rules of punctuation plus the finer points not addressed anywhere else, offering clear answers to perplexing questions about semicolons, quotation marks, periods, apostrophes, and more. Better yet, this is the only guide that uses handy icons to show how punctuation rules differ for book, news, academic, and science styles--so you can boldly switch between essays, online newsletters, reports, fiction, and magazine and news articles. <p/>This handbook also features rulings from an expert "Punctuation Panel" so you can see how working pros approach sticky situations. And the second half of the book features an alphabetical master list of commonly punctuated terms worth its weight in gold, combining rulings from the major style guides and showing exactly where they differ. With <i>The Best Punctuation Book, Period</i>, you'll be able to handle any punctuation predicament in a flash--and with aplomb.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><b>"</b>Ridiculously useful. The best book on punctuation I've ever seen.<b>"</b><br> --Mignon Fogarty<b>, </b> author of <i>Grammar Girl's Quick and Dirty Tips for Better Writing</i> <p/><b>"</b>Invaluable reference work for professional proofreaders, editors, and writers because it is the only book that presents Chicago, AP, APA, and MLA conventions side by side. (Acronym-free translation: for each use of each punctuation mark, this book clearly explains and illustrates the practices used by book publishers, the news media, social science publications, and nonscientific academic papers and journal articles.)<b>"</b><br> --Amy Einsohn, author of <i>The Copyeditor's Handbook</i> <p/><i><br></i><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>JUNE CASAGRANDE is the author of the weekly syndicated "A Word, Please" grammar column and a copy editor for the custom publishing department of the <i>Los Angeles Times</i>. She has worked as a reporter, features writer, city editor, proofreader, and copyediting instructor for UC San Diego Extension. She is the author of <i>Grammar Snobs Are Great Big Meanies, Mortal Syntax, </i>and<i> It Was the Best of Sentences, It Was the Worst of Sentences</i>. She lives in Pasadena, California, with her husband. Visit www.junecasagrande.com.
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