Few of you may know it, but "Do They Read Obituaries in Hell," has been following an evolving grammar and punctuation stylebook for more than two years, a code that employs lowercase sentence starts and closed words, freeing up the hyphen for such heavy lifting as the freight-train-length-descriptive-thought-that-doesn't-break-well and the doubled up Em Dash substitute. However, I think the time has come for me to trade the day-old pizza boxes and pajamas-as-streetclothes lazy college email style for the language of grownups. You, my dear readers, deserve the extra keystroke effort required for me to make use of capital letters.
I know it's going to be a tough adjustment for all of us. Hang in there.
this is quite dramatic.
ReplyDeletei can't wait!
also, i'm having a hell of a time commenting on your blog. i have to submit like 15 times. it's really annoying.
AT LEAST YOU ARE NOT USING ALL CAPS!!!!
ReplyDeleteEither way is good for my eyeballs :)
ReplyDeleteshould we stop using caps in comments? you know, to maintain stability in space-time continuum? i don't anticipate problems, mind you. but there's no sense looking for trouble, especially on that scale.
ReplyDeleteI had already noticed it by the time I finished the first line of this post. This will, in fact, be a tough adjustment.
ReplyDeleteFunny... The first thing I noticed as I started reading this post was the capital F. This is gonna take some getting used to...
ReplyDeletebut i like it when you use lower case. it's what makes you, you. :)
ReplyDeletewow... you're setting us up to be taken out in public... waw...
ReplyDeleteThat's inspiring! I'm going to make more of an effort for grammar and spelling as well and finally put that Elements of Style book to good use.
ReplyDeleteYou're making all of us 2.7 GPA English Majors proud.
ReplyDeletei agree with beenzzz. feel free to break the rules. do it your way. remember e e cummings.
ReplyDelete