A wonderful blend of substance and snark--both a useful reference and a fun (yes, fun) read. --Mignon Fogarty, author of the New York Times bestseller Grammar Girl's Quick and Dirty Tips for Better Writing These are solid maxims of the editing trade, yet they are unknown to some professionals who assume there is always a Right Way and who sacrifice sense and compromise clarity to avoid deviating from a rule, however trivial. So it's reassuring and constructive to see editorial flexibility upheld and indeed stressed by so august an arbiter. --Sentence First Are you a word maniac, a grammar addict, a vivid follower of guidelines presented by the Big Orange? Then But Can I Start a Sentence with But? Advice from the Chicago Style Q&A is just the book for you. The slim volume is a Best of from the archive of the Chicago Manual of Style Q&A (CMOS) Web site. --Technical Communication If you would expect a 'Best-Of anthology' from the Chicago Manual of Style Q&A page to be a dry affair, it is time to think again. . . . For anyone who has ever laughed at a 'Let's eat, Mom' versus 'Let's eat Mom'' joke (punch line: ''punctuation saves lives''), But Can I Start a Sentence with ''But''? is a must-have. This little guide book is the smart and sassy English teacher that we all wished we had. --Publishing Research Quarterly What impresses more than the witty replies is the blessed saneness throughout the answers. Many conventions of publishing are described in the 1,026 pages of the 16th edition, but the editors recognize that no manual, however comprehensive, can supply answers to every conceivable situation. So Saller and her colleagues advise: Don't hogtie yourself in some intricate and complicated procedure; try to extrapolate from an existing convention; arrive at something clear and reasonable; carry it out consistently through the text. --John E. McIntyre, Baltimore Sun