I finished this book some time ago, and I was going to write a long review on my author's webpage at another book site, but there's always disagreement on my part. I don't or will not be submitting reviews there further. No matter. I can't do enough since I am slow at all things. The world moves very fast, and I get stepped on too much. I wonder what Jane would say: Get over it.
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Regarding this book review---
The Jane Austen Writer’s Club explores the techniques of plotting, characterization, dialogue, setting, and suspense, and shares the advice—still relevant two centuries after her death—
Whether you are an inspiring novelist wanting to publish a first novel, a teacher searching for further inspiration for students, or an Austen needing insight into her daily rituals, this is an essential companion, guaranteed to satisfy, inform, and delight all.
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What did I like about this read?
I like that this comprehensive book can help, not just writers of novels, and those working in other forms, because Jane Austen is liked particularly for her accuracy in her observations; as her plots are neat and satisfying, and her usage of language is fanatically enjoyed.
Importantly, one must read, as Jane was a voracious reader. And don’t forget to write about things that you understand; Jane understood her society, and so she stayed close to home and did not stray, and nor did her writing.
**Writing dialogue—Jane's usage of this was to develop her characters, to move the plot forward, and, of course, for comedy and irony. This is a difficult one to achieve, but getting to know your characters, their lives, and voices will get better as the plot develops.
**Always keep things: light, bright, and sparkling as in clarity; no vagueness. Jane would not approve of the word “vagueness” after clarity; such redundancy is deplorable.
**Secrets and suspense—secrets are the key to driving Jane Austen’s fiction and to driving the narratives forward. She lived in a society where life was lived very publicly, and yet thru feelings and emotions were often kept hidden.
When you are feeling discouraged, it reminds you that Jane Austen was serious about her writing and had been working hard at her craft for around twenty years. She had complete belief in what she was doing from a very young age. Know yourself and to thyself be true; such is the wisdom provided to new writers, those wanting to take the plume to go forth with it.
Be a perfectionist—an artist should not do anything slovenly…you may not be writing the greatest novel of all time, yet you must get your work so good that you cannot improve upon it before you expose it to the world. A most common mistake aspiring writers make is to send their work to potential agents before it is ready…not getting feedback from intelligent and careful readers.
This mistake, I know too well as a reviewer of other people’s work; mine has never been reviewed or gotten feedback, yet I have submitted it and have gotten published, and never sold one or two of my book projects, as I call them, since they have no genre. What is similar to me and Jane Austen is that I write only what I want to write; I write for me, and perhaps why no one will read it. When all is said and done, remember to have fun, or else why write?