Writing Boots

On communication, professional and otherwise.

Archives for November 2020

Monday Morning Memo: On Having Written

11.23.2020 by David Murray // Leave a Comment

There may be no greater writing pleasure than to read one’s near-finished book galleys, as I was doing last week.

Especially when you have a drink at your elbow …

… you find yourself losing awareness that you wrote the thing, and idly marveling to yourself in a whiskey-voiced accent turned slightly southern, Goddamn!—

—finally a writer who thinks exactly like I do! Come to think of it, I don’t disagree with a single word this guy’s saying, and what’s more, I like the way he talks!

—what else has this bastard wrote, I gotta get my hands on it—

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Friday Happy Hour Video: Is it actually? A wonderful world?

11.20.2020 by David Murray // 1 Comment

“Some of you folks been sayin’, ‘Hey Pops, what do mean, ‘What a Wonderful World?'” Asked and answered, fifty years ago, and for all time.

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Some American words have outlived their usefulness; others now go without saying

11.19.2020 by David Murray // 1 Comment

Words come into popular usage, words go out. I try to keep the old ones around, because I am a hoarder. I still have palavers with my staff, and I tell my daughter it’s cold out, she should wear pantaloons. And that’s only two of the P words.

Usually we lose words and expressions when their cultural relevance fades, due to changes in circumstances. When someone drops a football, we don’t call them “butterfingers” anymore, because our home lives don’t involve a lot of handling of pans with butter-slathered hands.

Our shriveled agrarian roots have relegated expressions like “make hay while the sun shines” into legit head-scratchers for anyone under sixty.

And our long-forgotten common maritime experience washes the etymology and relevance away from phrases like, “We’re not having layoffs now, but I see them in the offing.” (The “offing,” of course, being the portion of the sea visible from shore, in which slowly approaching boats could sometimes be seen for days.)

But other times, words become irrelevant because what they describe is so ubiquitous that the words are no longer necessary.

I was once being squired around Phoenix, Arizona by a young native of the place. Gazing out the car window, I asked her why the whole town seems to be a series of strip malls. She asked me, “What is a strip mall?”

Similarly, have you noticed, you don’t often hear anyone call anyone “opinionated,” anymore.

Or, for that matter, a “boor.”

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