The author of How to Prepare Your Manuscript for a Publisher now presents more essential advice for fiction and nonfiction writers. This invaluable reference offers easy access to stratagems and tried-and-true literary shortcuts that help writers save time, improve style and avoid common pitfalls. Whether a beginner or student, amateur or professional, readers will refer time and again to David Carroll's practical tips for: writing with expression; improving structure; correcting and rewriting with greater efficiency; developing "writer's logic"; avoiding the hazards of burnout, boredom and lack of motivation; dealing with writer's block; and reworking scholarly prose for greater clarity.
- Consult the thesaurus before you begin a particular project and compile a representative list of the kinds of words you expect to use. - If you're searching for dated or "period" words from, say the 1920 or 1930s, consult an older word-finding reference. - Don’t tell your readers – show them. - Persuade with examples, not opinions. - Keep it specific. - Use words that evoke images. - Introduce a humorous or dramatic motif, then use it later with an ironic twist. - Use a series of short sentences to build tension. - Open with a bang; close with an emotion. - Make your sentences rise to a climax: let them reveal their most significant information at the end. - Plant questions as you go along. - When you’re stuck for an ending, go back to your beginning. - Let each paragraph become a ministory unto itself. - Read what you’ve written out loud.
Read this in one sitting. I was that engaged. basically, this is what writing books should be -- short and straight to the point. Recommended for the beginning writer and for those that need a little rehashing of the fundamentals.
Some things you learn by reading, others you learn by writing, and still others must be found in books on craft like this one. A good read for all readers, no matter how far along you are.