Praise for Subatomic Writing
Find your own writing voice.
Write powerfully. Understand the small stuff. Teachers, editors, publishers, and grant reviewers can already recognize AI's "blandly perfect" writing voice. If you're a working professional, an emerging professional, or a precocious high school student, it's time for you to level up in writing and increase your confidence in your own voice.
Use Subatomic Writing as a handbook to build a mental model of English as a whole, then return to it when you are revising to remember the tiny details that make writing polished, memorable, and meaningful. See why these six fundamental lessons—the heart of the popular Subatomic Writing course at Johns Hopkins University—earned praise from both physics and English professors alike, as well as praise from NPR, NASA, MIT, Argonne National Laboratory, Brevity Magazine, Mary Roach, Dava Sobel, Grammar Girl, and more. |
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To Professors:
Subatomic Writing: Six Fundamental Lessons to Make Language Matter (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2023) can be adopted as a secondary textbook for science courses or as a primary or secondary textbook for English language, writing, and editing courses.
Story, metaphor, mapping, and reference lists act as mnemonic aids so readers remember all the small, subatomic language conventions that produce clear, concise, engaging writing.
There are exercises at the end of each of the six lessons and a "How to Use Subatomic Writing in the Classroom" section at the end of the book, with options to interact with other students online using the hashtag #SubatomicWriting.
Subatomic Writing: Six Fundamental Lessons to Make Language Matter (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2023) can be adopted as a secondary textbook for science courses or as a primary or secondary textbook for English language, writing, and editing courses.
Story, metaphor, mapping, and reference lists act as mnemonic aids so readers remember all the small, subatomic language conventions that produce clear, concise, engaging writing.
There are exercises at the end of each of the six lessons and a "How to Use Subatomic Writing in the Classroom" section at the end of the book, with options to interact with other students online using the hashtag #SubatomicWriting.