Shady Characters: The Secret Life of Punctuation, Symbols, and Other Typographical Marks
Shady Characters: The Secret Life of Punctuation, Symbols, and Other Typographical Marks book cover

Shady Characters: The Secret Life of Punctuation, Symbols, and Other Typographical Marks

Illustrated Edition

Price
$12.50
Format
Paperback
Pages
352
Publisher
W. W. Norton & Company
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0393349726
Dimensions
5.5 x 1 x 8.3 inches
Weight
9.6 ounces

Description

"If Eats, Shoots & Leaves whetted your appetite on the subject of punctuation, then you have a treat in store. Shady Characters is an authoritative, witty, and fascinating tour of the history and rationale behind such lesser known marks as the ampersand, manicule, the pilcrow, and the interrobang. Keith Houston also explains the octothorpe―otherwise known as the hashtag―and and my final comment on his book is #awesome." ― Ben Yagoda, author of How to Not Write Bad "Make no mistake: this is a book of secrets. With zeal and rigor, Keith Houston cracks open the &, the #, the † and more―all the little matryoshka dolls of meaning that make writing work. Inside, we meet novelists, publishers, scholars and scribes; we range from ancient Greeks to hashtagged tweets; and we see the weird and wonderful foundations of the most successful technology of all time." ― Robin Sloan, author of Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore "Funny, surprising, and, of course, geeky." ― Michael D. Schaffer and John Timpane, Philadelphia Inquirer "Might make you look at books… in an entirely new way." ― Andrew Robinson, Nature "Houston…is a tireless researcher and an amiable teacher." ― Jan Gardner, Boston Globe "A pleasurable contribution to type history, particularly for readers who haven’t considered the ampersand in any detail." ― Carl W. Scarbrough, New Criterion "Fascinating." ― Rob Kyff, The Courant "An absolutely fascinating blend of history, design, sociology, and cultural poetics―highly recommended." ― Maria Popova, Brain Pickings "For fans of Lynn Truss’s Eats, Shoots & Leaves , this bestiary of lesser-known punctuation marks is a wonder." ― Publishers Weekly "I'm a sucker for this stuff. The @ is called a chiocciola (snail) in Italian! The & was once taught as a letter of the alphabet! The manicule has been with us for a millenium! Thank you, Keith Houston, for bringing these little mysteries out of the shadows of typographic history.xa0" ― Constance Hale, author of Sin and Syntax "A mostly amusing, informative history of punctuation… Houston explores the roles a variety of punctuation marks have played in the popular imagination. The forgotten manicule, the modest dash and the ampersand all make appearances, as do intriguing characters from millennia past. The book is often engrossing… An unusual triumph of the human ability to find exaltation in the mundane." ― Kirkus Reviews "This book has more in common with Malcolm Gladwell than with standard history writing." ― Library Journal Keith Houston is the author of Shady Characters and The Book . His writing has appeared in the New York Times , the Wall Street Journal , the Financial Times , Mental Floss , BBC Culture , and on Time.com. He lives in Birmingham, England.

Features & Highlights

  • “An absolutely fascinating blend of history, design, sociology, and cultural poetics―highly recommended.”―Maria Popova,
  • Brain Pickings
  • A charming and indispensable tour of two thousand years of the written word,
  • Shady Characters
  • weaves a fascinating trail across the parallel histories of language and typography.
  • Whether investigating the asterisk (*) and dagger (†)―which alternately illuminated and skewered heretical verses of the early Bible―or the at sign (@), which languished in obscurity for centuries until rescued by the Internet, Keith Houston draws on myriad sources to chart the life and times of these enigmatic squiggles, both exotic (¶) and everyday (&).
  • From the Library of Alexandria to the halls of Bell Labs, figures as diverse as Charlemagne, Vladimir Nabokov, and George W. Bush cross paths with marks as obscure as the interrobang (?) and as divisive as the dash (―). Ancient Roman graffiti, Venetian trading shorthand, Cold War double agents, and Madison Avenue round out an ever more diverse set of episodes, characters, and artifacts.
  • Richly illustrated, ranging across time, typographies, and countries,
  • Shady Characters
  • will delight and entertain all who cherish the unpredictable and surprising in the writing life.
  • 2-color; 75 illustrations

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(269)
★★★★
25%
(112)
★★★
15%
(67)
★★
7%
(31)
-7%
(-30)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Entertaining general survey with inexplicable bias against TeX

Shady Characters is a fast, fun read, but Houston's dismissal of TeX is just wrong. To its many users TeX is both elegant and beautiful: a one-minute Google image search for aesthetically pleasing if not straight-up remarkable examples of typesetting with TeX should have made this point self-evident. But in the sloppily-researched passages about TeX, Houston's usually reliable humor comes off as underinformed, even churlish. Houston's main objection seems to be that early attempts in TeX to resolve problems of justification and hyphenation led to arbitrary aesthetic decisions executed by (shiver) computers. His critique doesn't even use examples produced by TeX itself: he uses Hermann Zapf's derivative hz-program to criticize TeX's letter-scaling. From there he extrapolates to all such composition algorithms, presenting his aesthetic opinions as if they were objective assessments. All modern typesetting uses computer programming, as no one should know better than Houston. No matter the typesetting program, the output will always depend on the expertise and taste of the human being using it.
1 people found this helpful
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... blog since he began and this book is a great collection of all those characters we see

I've read his blog since he began and this book is a great collection of all those characters we see, but seldom think of.
1 people found this helpful
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Super fun read

Great book.
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If you write, this is the book for you!

If you write, this is the book for you!
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Loved it!

Takes a certain type of reader -- one like me, whose lifetime career has been devoted to the written word. Fun, informative, easy-to-read, and fascinating.loved it! In the weeds? Maybe for math people..
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Four Stars

Very interesting
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For those interested in punctuation and secret lives

"Shady Characters," a history of selected punctuation marks, was very interesting to me, and the great amount of research that went into it was obvious. The accounts included arcane names of some characters like the pilcrow and octothorpe, which do have easier and more widespread names now, and went into the historical forms and changes of them, such as the K for Kaput to signify the beginning of a new subject, i.e., eventually the paragraph, and the many permutations of form over the centuries. Some developments are discussed in the context of more general history and historical practices of more than tangential interest. If you like this stuff, I recommend reading it, if in limited sittings.
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You won't look at ancient monuments the same way again.

When you look at ancient monuments, they have no punctuation because only the very educated could read the and they mentally provided their own. The masses reading printed books made that situation impossible. So, point by point, they were added. Fascinating.
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you will enjoy this book

If you appreciate proper grammar, as we do, you will enjoy this book. It is informative and a good read.
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A perfect gift for the bibliophile or anyone who reads.

A charming original book