MIDRIFF FOR MIDRIFT AND PROOFREADING TODAY
By now, all and sundry must know that I read with a pencil in hand to highlight passages, phrases, and words, both known and unknown. or me, reading is an act of learning. I am well past halfway through Barbara Kingsolver's Demon Copperhead, and today I underlined the word midrift as odd-sounding. I underlined it and looked it up. Sure enough, the word should be spelt midriff , "the middle part of the body, between the chest and the waist." Ms. Kingsolver says at the end of her novel: "Every draft of this book was improved by advice from insightful readers..." and names a few of them. The author might reply and remind us that the narrator is, on page 302, only 15. The argument will not hold water because Demon uses ten-dollar words throughout, far more difficult than midriff. Unless the misspelling was deliberate—and I doubt it—it appears to have slipped past both the author and her readers.