Thursday, July 17, 2014

Don't Dangle Your Participle, by Vanita Oelschlager (illustrated by Mike Desantis)

So THAT'S what a participle is?

In the past I have criticized Vanita Oelschlager for not taking her ideas far enough or only telling half the story (Out of the Blue, for example) but here she gets it just right. 

I have nothing bad to say about this book. She explains the concept of participles--verbs used as adjectives to modify or describe a noun--and uses many examples of how a participle can be left "dangling"--i.e. modifying the wrong noun.

One example from the book: The verb "growl" can be used as a participle to describe a lion, as in "growling lion." If it's left "dangling" you can get a sentence like this: "Growling as they ate, the children gathered around the lions' cage." It sounds as though the children are growling instead of the lions, then there's a picture of children growling at the zoo. Very cute!

Like Lynne Truss before her (author of Eats, Shoots and Leaves), Vanita Oelschlager is making language fun for a whole new generation of sticklers.


BOOK DETAILS:
Don't Dangle Your Participle
Author: Vanita Oelschlager
Illustrator: Mike Desantis
Publisher: Vanita Books
Publication Date: May 1, 2014
View on Amazon

Source: NetGalley

Author's Website

Look inside the book!


ALSO RECOMMENDED:
Eats, Shoots and Leaves,
by Lynne Truss
Help Your Kids with Language Arts,
by DK Books
(my review)
101 Troublesome Words
You'll Master in No Time
,
by Mignon Fogarty
(my review)

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