Writers Tricks of the Trade Volume 5, Issue 4 | Page 18

PRESS “CONTROL” THEN CLICK “BUY” TO PURCHASE THE BOOK THERE IS SUCH A WEALTH A WRITER’S BANE: OF INFORMATION ON THE WEB—YOU JUST NEED TO KNOW WHERE TO FIND IT. WRITERS TRICKS OF THE TRADE IS CONSTANTLY ON THE DISEASE’S OF APOSTROPHE’S Originally posted on Indies Unlimited by Melissa Bowersock THE LOOKOUT FOR HELPFUL WEBSITES. There is a wealth of good articles on the Indies Unlimited site and Melissa Bowersock gave us permission to reprint this one. You will probably recognize all, or at least some, of these faux pas. THANK YOU MELISSA BOWERSOCK AND INDIESUNLIMITED.COM MELISSA BOWERSOCK AUTHOR Melissa Bowersock is an eclectic awardwinning writer who turns her hand to any kind of story that moves her: contemporary, western, fantasy, romance, action/adventure, biography, spiritual or satire. She thrives in the Sonoran desert of Southern Arizona with her husband and an Airedale terrier. She is also a certified hypnotherapist. I first began to notice it many years ago. Some people had trouble with its and it’s, a common confusion. But then it began to spread, like a cancer, across Facebook and Twitter, those bastions of common usage and colloquialism. When it began showing up in writers’ forums, I knew it was reaching epic proportions. The virulent, creeping Disease’s of the Apostrophe’s. “I bought some DVD’s …” “How many like’s can I get …” “Where can I promote my book’s for Kindle…” I get it when it comes to the its and it’s. Most possessives have an apostrophe, as in Pandora’s box or Burke’s law. But pronouns (which it is) don’t — like his, her and their. The apostrophe in it’s is because it’s a contraction (of it is), not because it’s a possessive case. Of course the vast majority of