Writing Made Easy: Just the Basicsย covers the following information:
โGrammar, Syntax, Usage, Diction, Etymology
โMechanics: abbreviations, capitalization, spelling
โAgreement Tips: past, present, and future; singular and plural; first, second, and third person voices
โUsingย whomย correctly
โPunctuation Marks: apostrophe, brackets, colon, comma, dash, ellipsis, exclamation point, hyphen, parentheses, quotation marks, semicolon, slash
โSentences: required ingredients, sentence mistakes (sentence fragments, run-on sentences, and comma-splice sentences โ and how to correct them)
โParagraphs: required ingredients; introduction, body, and concluding paragraphs; transition words
โRhetorical Techniques: alliteration, allusion, hyperbole, metaphor, onomatopoeia, irony, parallel construction, personification
โArguing Well: critical thinking, dialectics; Aristotleโsย ethos, pathos, & logos; the Socratic Method, common ground
โFallacies:ย ad hominemย attack, begging the question, coded language, double-edged sword, hasty analogy, red herring, slippery slope, straw man,ย etc.
โResearch Tips: advanced Google searches, Boolean operators, databases, Google Scholar, Google News, WolframAlpha, the CIA Factbook,ย etc.
โResearch Paper (MLA 9th Edition): direct quotes, indirect quotes, interpolations, in-text citations, works cited page, hanging indents, correct formatting
โWriting Terms defined: bombastic, cliche, colloquial, concise, diction, etymology, euphemism, figure of speech, hyperbole, jargon, metaphor, oxymoron, redundant, rhetoric, slang, succinct, verbose,ย etc.
โLatin Terms for Writers defined:ย a priori, ad hoc, ad infinitum, ad nauseam, alumnus, bona fide, de facto, ibidem (ibid.), ipso facto, non sequiter, per se, prima facie, quasi, reductio ad absurdem, sic, summa cum laude, magna cum laude, verbatim, etc.
โSample Essays included: descriptive essay, argumentative essay, research paper (MLA 9th Edition)
โWriting approaches, insights, and advice
Timothy Sharkey (author) has a Master of Liberal Arts degree in English & American Literature & Language from Harvard University. He has a Bachelor of General Studies degree (with a concentration in Film) from The University of Michigan. He has taught English 101 and English 102 classes in college in Chicago for over 20 years, and he has succeeded in taking complicated information and simplifying it for the demanding students in his classes.
Timothy Sharkey has taught English 101 and English 102 classes in college for over 15 years. He has a Master of Liberal Arts degree in English & American Literature & Language from Harvard University. He has developed a skill in taking the complicated information about writing and simplifying it for the demanding students enrolled in his classes. He believes that the good information about writing should be easy to find in one book, and he has compiled that information throughout his 15 years of teaching. Writing Made Easy: Just the Basics is the culmination of Timothy Sharkeyโs 15-year effort to put the good information about writing into one book.