Some people come into this world nicely dominant in their
left brains and therefore neurologically prepared to spell well and find typos
at a glance. I am not one of those. I am right-handed and right-footed, but
left-eyed: therefore stumped by spelling and blind to bumbled typing.
Those were the days of Olivetti portables and no spell
check.
My most inconvenient mistake came, not in school, but in an
article I wrote while working in the training department of a Wall Street
bank. I had devised a program to recruit
women from the welfare rolls, to teach them skills that would qualify them for
jobs in the bank, and to get them on their way to supporting themselves and
their families. The banking community
took an interest in the work, and I was asked to write an article describing it
for an industry newspaper. As published
the article contained only one wrong letter—a “w” instead of “t.” What I meant to say was “This program is not
available to the public.” Except that
it came out “now available.” Thousands
of phone calls later. . .
Writing on a computer with spell check has improved matters
measurably, but perfection still escapes me, as regular readers of this blog
have undoubtedly noticed, to my great embarrassment.
My consolation is that I am not alone in this
impairment. Typos have escaped into
print in books. My favorite is in the
first edition of Bubbles, the
autobiography of Beverly Sills. Knowing
how I loved the opera and admired Ms. Sills, my mother-in-law gave me a copy one
Christmas. The first line reads, “I was
only three years old the first time I sang in pubic.”
This past week, I have been proofreading (with trepidation) the
first pass pages of Blood Tango, set
to launch on June 25th. I am
probably missing some things, but luckily I caught a typo (not mine but the
typesetters’ I am happy to say) that is potentially as embarrassing as the one
in Beverly Sills’s book. In this case an
“r” has been substituted for an “s.”
Just one letter! Near the bottom
of page 15, a paragraph begins, “But Tulio Puglisi knew in his boner that
stopping Evita. . .”
These are my favorites. Tell us yours.
Annamaria Alfieri
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