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Write Right!: Creative Writing Using Storytelling Techniques

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Haven's breakthrough approach to creative writing begins with an improbable technique that does not involve writing. Coaching students to "start with 'storytelling," the author and storyteller shares a vital but often forgotten step of the creative process. His practical and detailed guide provides directions for 38 writing exercises that help students create powerful and dynamic fiction. All the steps -- from finding inspiration and creating believable characters to making the final edit -- are covered. Activities, coded for grades from primary through high school, can easily be adapted to other levels. A highly effective way to teach writing, this is an approach that makes writing fun for you and your students.

213 pages, Paperback

First published April 1, 1999

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Kendall Haven

46 books14 followers

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Hovhannes Gulyan.
20 reviews6 followers
November 15, 2014
Write right is initiated for teaching students to write stories, but it was very practical and interesting book on storytelling for a non-writer as well.
Author compares writing stories with shooting movies. The second half of the book is filled with exercises for groups and individuals.
I'd recommend this book to anyone who is interested in storyterling.
Profile Image for Costin Manda.
681 reviews21 followers
February 28, 2019
Write Right! is a monster. It goes through every step of writing a book, including the one that the author, Kendal Haven, considers the most important: editing. Then, in its second half, it contains exercises for improving writing. The intended audience of this book is teachers of creative writing, not just beginner writers, so that makes it even more valuable.

The mystery for me was how can someone write about captivating and engaging writing in a book as dry as Creative Writing Using Storytelling Techniques. I understand it is mostly a manual, but it was really difficult to go through it, as it was full of information start to finish. Now I must reread it at speed and make a summary of the techniques in order to even begin to absorb the huge amount of very useful information in the work. Not to mention actually doing the exercises at the end.

What I really liked about this book is that it is very algorithmic. At every page I was considering - and still am - how I might codify this into a software to help me evaluate a piece of literature and maybe even suggest improvements automatically. If I am to extract an essential idea of the work it would be "editing is very important". The author acknowledges the need to write fast, from your gut, to lay the words out there, not even considering spelling or grammar, just vomit your thoughts onto the page, but then he submits that the process of evaluating each scene, each chapter and the book for structure, wording, verb uses, sense involvement, specificity of language, action, dialogue, sequels (not book sequels, but that thing that details what characters think and feel about what just happened), etc. is perhaps the most important in translating that story that you have into an interesting book to read. And after getting a final version you are happy about, he makes you eliminate 15% of the words. Ruthless! :)

Let me make this clear, though: writing is damn tough. It consists of two parts: observing the world and describing the world. In a recent post I was complaining at how bad I am at the former, but this book makes it clear how complex is the latter. Making the written word express what is in your brain at the moment of creation is extremely difficult and complicated. This book helps in defining exactly what that is and give you tools to do it and improve on doing it. A great tool!

To sum it up: This is not light reading. It is a manual for writing teachers (what the hell are those? I wish I had some in school). It helps tremendously if you are self-taught, also. It requires multiple readings or at least a summarizing effort at the end, to structure it in a way that makes it easy using it as a reference. And then, of course, are the exercises for improving writing which take the second half of the book
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March 18, 2008
Most books on writing discuss "how to write" from a writing aproach, Kendall combines telling stories to develop how to write stories. It is a useful classroom (or community) book.
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