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- (Smail3.1.28.1 #7) id m0nGj3s-0000L2C; Mon, 25 Jan 93 21: 42 PST
- From: chrisc@pro-harold.cts.com (Chris Carstens)
- Subject: Re: Rules for writers
- Organization: The Harold Network -- An Alliance For Creative Communication
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 93 21:07:01 PST
- Message-ID: <ap76438@pro-harold.cts.com>
- In-Reply-To: mfc1493@tamsun.tamu.edu (Ratboy)
- References: <1jvnqpINNa12@tamsun.tamu.edu>
- Lines: 32
-
- Here are my rules of thumb -- mostly learned from my dad, who was a better
- editor than I've ever had the privilege of working with since.
-
- 1) Kill your darlings. If is sounds wonderful, like it could simply not
- be said any better, it's probably something you read. Sometimes you work
- an entire paragraph around one ever so clever sentence -- kill em, and
- write straight prose.
-
- 2) If it's really important, let somebody you trust read it before you
- send it out.
-
- 3) Corrolary to #2 -- listen to what your trusted reader has to say.
-
- 4) Outline in complete sentences. Any really good piece of non-fiction
- can usually be summarized in a single sentence, whether it's a book or a
- 600 word article. If you can't write the sentence, you don't know what the
- piece is about yet. The discipline of the complete sentence forces you to
- really think your ideas through before you start writing.
-
- 5) Trying to write non-fiction without a complete written outline is like
- trying to drive from Los Angeles to Dubuque without a map. It can be done,
- but it's not sensible.
-
- 6) When your're out of things to say, stop.
-
- Chris.
- -----
- Chris Carstens
- ProLine: chrisc@pro-harold
- Internet: chrisc@pro-harold.cts.com
- UUCP: crash!pro-harold!chrisc
- San Diego, California, USA
-