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Weinberg on Writing: The Fieldstone Method

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Gerald M. Weinberg, author of more than sixty books and hundreds of articles——reveals his secrets for collecting and organizing his ideas for writing projects. Drawing an analogy to the stone-by-stone method of building fieldstone walls, Weinberg shows writers how to construct fiction and nonfiction manuscripts from key insights, stories, and quotes. The elements, or stones, are collected non-sequentially, over time, and eventually find logical places in larger pieces.The method renders writer’s block irrelevant and has proved effective for scores of Weinberg’s writing class students. If you’ve ever wanted to write a book or article—or need to revitalize your writing career—don’t miss this intimate glimpse into the mind behind some of the world’s favorite books.Science Fiction and Fantasy writer, Jane Lindskold, calls this book "a strange little part writer's guide, part personal philosophy, and part autobiography. As such, it has something to offer for writers of non-fiction and fiction alike—and would also be a good read for anyone who has ever wondered where writers get their ideas."Terra Ziporyn, Novelist and co-author of The New Harvard Guide to Women's Health found it to be "inspiring, uplifting, and affirming—valuable even for someone who thinks she knows how to write books. It was also breezy to read and full of the amusing anecdotes that I associate with all Jerry Weinberg's books. Of course, I also enjoyed having things that I have always done unconsciously identified and discovering that they were good ideas. Made me feel competent!Penny Raife Durant, Award-winning children's book author said, "I suppose the strongest praise of a how-to write book would be to say it's changed the way I intend to organize and write my next book. And it's true! I'm now beginning to gather information and think about the structure of my next project, and I'm going to adopt Jerry's Fieldstone Method. I think Jerry has made my writing life easier. This book is a gift to writers at all levels from a true pro with sterling credentials. - Howie Becker, author of Writing for Social Scientists, wrote. "Jerry Weinberg's lessons in writing are smart, funny, memorable, wise, engaging . . . and, most important, it is all stuff that works, it's practical. What more would you want?"Jennifer Lawler, author of Dojo Wisdom for Writers, says, "Part memoir, part how-to, Weinberg on Writing dispenses with the mysteries and misconceptions of craft and shows any writer how -- and how not to -- hone their skills. Weinberg's method of finding fieldstones with which to build your writing strikes me as one of the more effective metaphors for the writing craft I've ever seen. Weinberg also rightly places the emphasis on writing about what matters to you rather than perpetrating the old saw, 'Write what you know.' Writers of any stripe will go far following Weinberg's method."Matt Heusser, professional writer, said, "Weinberg on Writing describes the actual process a real person goes about when coming up with ideas for a piece, how he organizes those ideas, and little things like transitions and word choice. It will be especially helpful with people trying to get published in a magazine for the first time or people who produce technical documentation for a living.I've never read a book so specific, down-to-earth, and approachable about the writing process. Most of what I have learned about writing was learned by finding *bad* writing, learning the symptoms, and trying to avoid them. This book actually provides positive, specific steps to improve the quality of your writing, along with exercises.

194 pages, Kindle Edition

First published November 1, 2005

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About the author

Gerald M. Weinberg

95 books372 followers
Gerald Marvin Weinberg (October 27, 1933 – August 7, 2018) was an American computer scientist, author and teacher of the psychology and anthropology of computer software development.

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5 stars
84 (38%)
4 stars
81 (36%)
3 stars
40 (18%)
2 stars
10 (4%)
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5 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews
Profile Image for Johanna Rothman.
Author 45 books109 followers
August 21, 2012
I've been working on improving my writing for about 20 years. When I was inside organizations, I asked some of my colleagues to review my memos and reports. I gained valuable insights. ("A verb, JR, a verb. Please.") But once I started my consulting business 11 years ago, I needed more help with my writing. My early reviewers gave me useful and helpful feedback. But it wasn't until I took Jerry Weinberg's writing workshop that I was able to take my writing to the next level.

If you want to take a writing workshop but don't feel you have the time or the money to spend a week at a workshop, buy this book. Work through the exercises--yes, all of them. Listen to Jerry's advice, such as "Never attempt to write something you don't care about" or "Writer's block is not a disorder in you, the writer. It's a deficiency in your writing methods--the mythology you've swallowed about how works get written."

I'm proof these techniques work. I've published three books, over 100 articles, and am working on my next few books. One of the techniques Jerry suggests is that you have many fieldstones, chunks of work in progress. In progress may mean you've written two words. It may mean you've written several chapter-like things. It may mean you've written 50 words. Fieldstones allow you to make progress on any piece of work, which can allow you to finish more writing projects than you could imagine.

If you want to start your writing career, or if you want to write better, or if you want to revitalize your writing, buy this book.
Profile Image for Steven Deobald.
57 reviews28 followers
January 19, 2022
I'm in a peculiar situation with this book. I'm actively recommending it to people... but I'm also giving it two stars. I'll try to explain my reconciliation process.

The ideas in this book are coherent. Many of Weinberg's suggestions are techniques I've gleaned from other sources and the stories, suggestions, and exercises are all worth working through. It's a light read and the entire book is easy to digest.

So why two stars? The writing is just not very good. It's not terrible. But for a book about writing it feels like there should be more to this little pamphlet. The transitions are not arresting, but there is grit in the derailleur. His ideas are sound, but they do not read as a continuum. It's perhaps a genius form of self-reference that his book feels like running one's hand over a fieldstone wall ... but I'm guessing that wasn't intentional. Brilliant writing feels smooth and worn, like the plaster of some Mughalai palace. He never quite achieves that.

I will continue to recommend this book, under two conditions. One, it must be paired with Clear and Simple as the Truth. Two, it should be digested as a textbook. Clear and Simple is sufficiently pretentious that The Fieldstone Method will feel refreshing afterward — but more like a mug full of lukewarm water while re-shingling your house in cloudless July than a gin and tonic on the porch. Still, worth reading.
Profile Image for Ernestasia Siahaan.
146 reviews11 followers
May 4, 2012
I got hooked from the very first advice it gave. This is not the typical "write for your market" kind of thing. This really talks about the creative process of writing, starting from having the heart to write, all the way to life after publishing.

Suitable for writers of any genre : fiction, non-fiction, technical, etc.

Profile Image for Alex.
22 reviews2 followers
December 25, 2009
I've read a lot of books on writing and this is my favorite by far.
Profile Image for Scott Pearson.
860 reviews42 followers
February 10, 2019
Gerry Weinberg has a PhD in communications and has written around 60 books on various topics, mostly having to do with computer programming. As a glorified computer programmer and an aspiring writer, this Weinberg book on his methodology for writing seems appealing.

His basic take runs through writing from the heart. He uses the analogy for nineteen of twenty chapters in this book of craftsperson building a wall with "fieldstones" and mortar.

For example, the act of sorting stones into piles is compared with sorting one's ideas into working projects. Many ideas, like many stones, are to be thrown away. Some are meant for placement in one section; some are meant for placement in others. All require careful arrangement.

I like how Weinberg's process is highly non-linear, much like the way I think. I tend to accomplish more through the use of non-linear thinking. (Aren't all good minds essentially non-linear?) I also appreciate the spatial metaphors he uses as I find the linear way I was taught to write in high school to be very confusing.

I write words like I write code - in a blow-off-the-doors, mad rush to dump out my thoughts onto a keyboard. Fitting in a linear process does not really work well for me, whether that be in a manager's linear model (waterfall methodology anyone?) or in an English teacher's ploy for high test grades. I do best when I just make a quick dump and organize as I go. This seems to be how Weinberg teaches us how to communicate as well. That confidence in a method that fits me enables me to write more recklessly and with more moxie than I would otherwise. For that, I am grateful to have read this book.
Profile Image for Dave.
53 reviews15 followers
February 26, 2019
I found the overall message of the book great, and it made me want to write more.

“Fieldstones” are small pieces of information, quotes, ideas etc which have “energy” for you - they are inspiring or interesting, they spark something for you. If you gather these all the time, you’ll end up having enough “fieldstones” to make various “walls” (books, articles etc). The book gives lots of detail on how to collect them, and on the process of writing - how to combine the stones to make something that retains the initial spark of the original pieces.

The downsides are that the book felt longer than it needed to be, and that the wall / writing analogy felt a bit stretched at times.
Profile Image for Danie.
124 reviews4 followers
February 7, 2021
Being the master storyteller that Jerry was, this book is crafted around a single, powerful metaphor:

That of gathering stones, to then organise and construct aesthetically pleasing walls.

I now have a physical felt sense of what weight, shape, and texture will be of the fieldstones that I want to gather. With my toolbox filled with practical exercises I am excited to then polish and fit them into many future walls I want to construct.
Profile Image for Miguel Ángel Alonso Pulido.
Author 11 books59 followers
May 13, 2017
Lo siento, pero el método del campo de piedras de Gerald Weinberg no es adecuado para mí, ni le veo utilidad para la escritura de ficción. Hay algunos puntos destacados en todo el libro, pero en general no le he visto ninguna utilidad. Por supuesto, ese es solo mi punto de vista, el tuyo puede variar.
Profile Image for Dave.
127 reviews9 followers
January 30, 2022
I started and read half through The Fieldstone Method a number of years ago. Succinctly:

1. This is how I've always written, did not know there was a name for it.
2. This is not a good method, for me, for intermittently delivering business or technical writing on demand. There are other books for that skill.
Profile Image for Lily Kirsch.
12 reviews
September 18, 2018
I miss you, Grandpa Jerry. Thank you for giving me, and the rest of the world, the gift of your spirit and your writing.

(Still not sure why you put a picture of Camille in this book and never used one of me... but I guessss I won’t take off any stars)
Profile Image for Dave.
198 reviews
May 6, 2024
An odd quine: Weinberg promotes the Fieldstone method by showing how the Fieldstone method produced the book that's describing it.

A utilitarian approach to gathering, organizing, and producing works of writing the same way long-enduring walls are made from gathered stone. The book itself resembles the namesake fieldstone wall: rough, but solid.
Profile Image for Bricoleur  (David) Soul.
22 reviews61 followers
May 8, 2010

"With wit, charm, humor, and wisdom, Gerald Weinberg shows you exactly how to become a more effective consultant" says the Goodreads' description for one of my favorite books Secrets of Successful Consulting.... well simply substitute effective writing for the italicized words and you've got the gist of this book.

Studded with lots of examples and exercises for the reader, the book could help writers of all genres and all skill levels; the most important lesson is not to just fight through "writers block" but to leap around it and Weinberg seems to have found a metaphor, "the Fieldstone Method," that will work if faithfully practiced. But then the proof of this statement will have to, for me, wait for its actual use in practice!

I must admit that the "reading" was so good I skipped those exercises best done in teams. That said, the self discovery that came from the solitary exercises I did complete was great enough that I will be going back through the book, at a more leisurely pace, to ensure that I make use of the remaining ones - something I have never, in any book of this nature, had any interest in doing. That in itself is testimony to the power of the book.

613 reviews11 followers
July 12, 2015
The Fieldstone Method is a simple and easy to apply method for writing. It doesn’t matter if you write a book or just a text for work. When you collect good ideas in a more organized way, then you can use those “fieldstones” for your work. Not all will fit and maybe you are better off by ignoring many in your collection. But when you have nice sentences or useful images that bring ideas to the point, go ahead and use them.

Are Your Lights On?” is a great book by Gerald M. Weinberg that still defines for me his writing. The Software Quality Series had many ups and downs and is a good reminder that even with a method like this one, you still may write books that are not that good. However, an author who wrote more than 40 books knows definitely how to organize his work to get such an output.

So far I don’t have much experience with this method, but it’s an interesting idea that is worth following up. I therefore can recommend you this book when you have to write much and often need to search for ideas.
Profile Image for Andrew.
168 reviews6 followers
February 22, 2013
Documents the approach the author used to complete many of his works. Useful, but the end drags.
Profile Image for Cindy.
69 reviews1 follower
January 20, 2013
Writing lessons. Usefull when you experience a writer's block.
51 reviews5 followers
March 1, 2016
I have read hundreds of how-to-write books, and this may be the best. It is very unlike the others, really stunning in the originality of its pragmatism.
Profile Image for cosh.
25 reviews1 follower
December 30, 2022
better than 'how to take smart notes'. i liked how reading this feels like i was also a student in one of his workshops.
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews

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