“When the reader has stopped to wonder at your delamificatious vocabulary, or, worse, when the reader has stopped because the word you've used has no more meaning to him than a random ptliijnbvc of letters, the reader is not involved in your story. ... Generally, saying 'edifice' instead of 'building' doesn't tell your reader anything about the building; it tells the reader that you know that word edifice.”
―
How Not to Write a Novel: 200 Classic Mistakes and How to Avoid Them—A Misstep-by-Misstep Guide
Share this quote:
Friends Who Liked This Quote
To see what your friends thought of this quote, please sign up!
4 likes
All Members Who Liked This Quote
This Quote Is From
How Not to Write a Novel: 200 Classic Mistakes and How to Avoid Them—A Misstep-by-Misstep Guide
by
Howard Mittelmark4,203 ratings, average rating, 733 reviews
Open Preview
Browse By Tag
- love (101629)
- life (79592)
- inspirational (76043)
- humor (44434)
- philosophy (31100)
- inspirational-quotes (28973)
- god (26950)
- truth (24785)
- wisdom (24710)
- romance (24422)
- poetry (23376)
- life-lessons (22678)
- quotes (21163)
- death (20594)
- travel (19536)
- happiness (19082)
- hope (18596)
- faith (18468)
- inspiration (17371)
- spirituality (15775)
- relationships (15695)
- life-quotes (15638)
- religion (15424)
- love-quotes (15412)
- motivational (15365)
- writing (14965)
- success (14207)
- motivation (13222)
- time (12895)
- motivational-quotes (12626)




