A Book Critic’s Best Friend: The Synonym Finder

Words, words, and more words: these are the most important tools of the trade for any writer.

Sometimes the joy of uniting them into something eloquent is indescribable. You know exactly what you want to impart to the reader, but you can’t find the right word to convey the meaning. And sometimes you find the right word and you overuse it.

Whether you’re writing a novel, nonfiction article, or book review, you’ll want to make your point and keep your reader’s interest. Using the same hackneyed expressions is a sure way to lose them. Unfortunately, that happens a lot in book reviews. The same words keep appearing over and over again.

That’s why I call THE SYNONYM FINDER a book reviewer’s best friend.

Example: If you read book reviews, you will see the word intriguing appear many times.

What if you’re writing a review and want an alternative, but just can’t think of one?

Get a copy of THE SYNONYM FINDER by JI Rodale. Search for the word intriguing and you will find: interesting, absorbing, engaging, fascinating, stimulating, exciting, moving, thrilling, seductive, fun, charming, captivating, alluring, attractive, attractive and captivating.

That is just one example. This thesaurus contains a staggering 1,500,000 words. If you can’t find what you’re looking for here, it hasn’t been said yet.

It’s in a dictionary format, which I find much easier to use than one organized by topic. There are subdivisions for different parts of speech and different meanings of the same word; also includes slang, archaic, scientific, and other special terms.

I can not recommend it highly enough. My own paperback is so worn; I have put the hardcover version on my wish list.

If you do any type of writing, THE SYNONYM FINDER is absolutely vital, indispensable, essential, mandatory and a necessity.

Grand Central Publishing 1361 pages ISBN: 978-0-446-37029-5

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *