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The Writer's Idea Workshop: How to Make Your Good Ideas Great

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The author of The Writer's Idea Book explains how to assess one's ideas and transform them into finished pieces in a guide that includes more than three hundred creative exercises, helpful instruction, and writing-pased prompts, all designed to help would-be writers become more creative, complete more projects, cure writer's block, and more. Original. 10,000 first printing.

240 pages, Paperback

First published September 30, 2003

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Jack Heffron

14 books9 followers

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5 stars
19 (31%)
4 stars
22 (36%)
3 stars
17 (28%)
2 stars
1 (1%)
1 star
1 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Mary Warner.
Author 1 book9 followers
March 22, 2009
I found this book at just the right point in my writing career. I've finished self-publishing a book, have several ideas I want to develop, but am out of the habit of writing. This only applies to my fiction. I don't ever seem to have trouble writing nonfiction. The Writer's Idea Workshop helps writers to work through stalled work, no matter where in a piece you are stalled. It has general ideas for writer's block, but it goes further than that, assisting writers in getting needed distance, injecting new ideas, and rekindling enthusiasm for a work in progress.
Profile Image for Jeff.
119 reviews31 followers
May 23, 2016
A book that any writer (especially novices) will refer to often--so much helpful information, and a wide variety of prompts that will lead a blocked or bored writer to regain some momentum on a stalled piece. One note of advice: Prompts abound; about 300 of them (perhaps, for ADD types like me, you may be tempted to try each one--I would have preferred just a few prompts were put up front in each chapter, with the remainder placed further back in the chapter or book). But all in all, if you can just try a prompt or two in whatever chapters best apply to your needs, you'll likely accelerate your progress.
Profile Image for Amy Saunders.
Author 28 books128 followers
October 13, 2008
A favorite book in my library. I've used this several times to "explode" my initial ideas or works-in-progress. Aside from getting you excited to write, it has all kinds of prompts and exercises to explore, develop, and revive whatever you're working on. When I feel a piece going stale, I pull this off my shelf.
Profile Image for Celia.
1,644 reviews114 followers
February 22, 2008
This was OK, I guess - it seems to be mostly concerned with how to develop ideas when you're completely stuck with them and don't know where to go next. Which I suppose is fair enough - if you're not stuck, why are you reading books about writing?
Profile Image for Chris Bridges.
54 reviews8 followers
February 7, 2015
great book, it goes on my to buy list, I will be using it for a long time
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews