Wednesday, April 29, 2020

Lead and Led

Lead and Led

This is something that has been showing up more in my editing work. It’s curious because I don’t remember seeing any confusion on this ten or twenty years ago.

If you look at read and read (I will read this; I have read that), you see how the spelling stays the same but the pronunciation changes. We expect lead to follow the same pattern, but it doesn’t. The past tense of leadled — is spelled how it sounds. Perhaps this is because lead (pronounced led) is a metal and was already taken (and red is a color).

Trick to Remember
Try to remember this sentence: 
He was led to a dark alley where he was shot full of lead.

Monday, March 16, 2020

Review: The Silent Patient

The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides

☆☆☆
Fiction — Drama

Alicia, an artist, adores her husband but then inexplicably shoots him five times and then never says another word. Theo, a psychotherapist, is obsessed with her case and manages to become her therapist at her mental hospital.



To be honest, I was pretty bored for the first half. It wasn’t thrilling or suspenseful; just drama laced with Deep Thoughts. I found Alicia’s diary more interesting than Theo’s life. I don’t care about art (my kids all surpassed my drawing ability around the age of 4) or other people’s marriages.


Then it got a little more interesting as I developed a bunch of wild theories, most involving split personalities. The surprise twist was one of those theories. So the ending is pretty exciting, but I wouldn’t call this a psychological thriller — just a psychological drama. I was pretty satisfied with the final ending. But is a book still a good book if it completely relies on a single gimmick to make it more interesting?




It is written well, though. I listened to the audio; I learned that Alicia is pronounced totally different in British English than American English.


Lots of strong language; some sexual content that is not too graphic; some violence.