Latest blogs

Let’s delete redact

It’s as if media organisations no longer have gruff chiefs of staff who teach young reporters how to write. Many years ago my boss was the redacteur-en-chef, but that was in Paris at Agence France-Presse. Nowadays, you’ll see the words redact and redacted  everywhere. In English. The Latin root of the word means to bring things together, to shape something, usually a piece of writing … Editing is the right word for it. Somehow, though, the latest usages of redact …

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Winners are grinners

I certainly grinned when I was told yesterday that I’d won the UK Fiction Factory’s 2019-2020 short story prize for my yarn Last Meal. At 150 quid, the first-prize money sure ain’t Nobel-sized, but I was thrilled to come out on top in an international competition. Read my story and learn more about the Fiction Factory competition at  http://www.fiction-factory.biz/.  

Housing rubbish words

Commenting on the effects of COVID-19 on the housing market, a real-estate executive said yesterday that she thought there’d be ‘less transactions in the sales area’. I collapsed, of course. The word ‘less’ is wrong for a start. And ‘in the sales area’ is just inflated rubbish speech. What she should have said was that there’d be ‘fewer sales’. That’s all. No more, no less. Pedant! I hear you scream. Yes, but there’s more to it than that. My best …

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