So, I didn't finish this book...and I tried....I really, really tried...for an entire month.
I'm an English teacher, and my colleague recommended it to me for a project we do that involves political speeches. Honestly, I was really excited about upping my game for my students.
First off, this book takes any love a person might have for the written word and squeezes the life blood clean out of it.
Secondly, it is written in a highly esoteric manner. I wouldn't allow my students to write this way...I tell them all the time that language is for enlightening, not excluding.
Finally, I found the book's tone highly offensive even though I realized that it was meant to be tongue in cheek. Statistics not backing up your argument? Show a part of the graph that purposefully misleads your audience. Think your opponent is making a great point? Ignore it, and point out a word he mispronounced. Can you really trust someone like that?
In the end, aside from being a great projectile, this book was good for one more thing. I flipped to the back and found "Further Readings". I am now about a third of the way through Weston's Rulebook for Arguments. It's short, it's clear, and it's absolutely fascinating. I can't wait to teach the students what I learned on Monday!