I know what you mean. The problem is I've spent so much time thinking about art in it's older use that writing as craft and art mean exactly the same thing to me. lolMargo wrote:I also align more with the writing-as-craft than writing-as-art camp, which I suspect will be spectacularly unsurprising to quite a few people.
The rules of "stronger" writing... lol?
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Re: The rules of "stronger" writing... lol?
Re: The rules of "stronger" writing... lol?
I kicked a lot of these issues around to FK7.
Eventually they get logged into the back of your mind and you notice
if your using this that or the other style crutch to many times in to short a span.
Particular fetishes with some people are the use of "as' to introduce an action sequence
and the word "but" to begin the next sentence that balances a previous thought or description.
I think a its like a recipe where a normal amount of style crutches have to be in the mix or the writing
does seem too contrived and paced consciously around pure style overcoming the tale.
I go mad with spelling errors and bad grammar and try to whack out 10-30 pages at a time.
Then go back a day or two later to try to be a page flow cop allowing a few weakness and
making sure the extremes of dialogue or action stay extreme and the transitions are smoothed out.
I do stay very conscious with long sentences to present the information with a word flow
that locks each segment as a unit into a tight package that either promotes the reader absorbing
key facts or inflating a certain environment at the right speed to prepare for action or conflict
dialogue between characters moving away from compromise.
Sometimes I think its a good idea to break the rules and use "suddenly" three times on the same
page; almost as if the writer is just as nervous as the reader while danger approaches.
Eventually they get logged into the back of your mind and you notice
if your using this that or the other style crutch to many times in to short a span.
Particular fetishes with some people are the use of "as' to introduce an action sequence
and the word "but" to begin the next sentence that balances a previous thought or description.
I think a its like a recipe where a normal amount of style crutches have to be in the mix or the writing
does seem too contrived and paced consciously around pure style overcoming the tale.
I go mad with spelling errors and bad grammar and try to whack out 10-30 pages at a time.
Then go back a day or two later to try to be a page flow cop allowing a few weakness and
making sure the extremes of dialogue or action stay extreme and the transitions are smoothed out.
I do stay very conscious with long sentences to present the information with a word flow
that locks each segment as a unit into a tight package that either promotes the reader absorbing
key facts or inflating a certain environment at the right speed to prepare for action or conflict
dialogue between characters moving away from compromise.
Sometimes I think its a good idea to break the rules and use "suddenly" three times on the same
page; almost as if the writer is just as nervous as the reader while danger approaches.
Re: The rules of "stronger" writing... lol?
For me, there are two basic "rules" that I use to assess the strength of writing at the sentence level:
1. The sentence or phrase should read smoothly and clearly. When you read the sentence, do you stumble over the syntax or become confused about what the subject is? For example, the reason that speech tags like "he breathed," "he exlaimed," etc. are so frowned upon is because hey draw the reader's attention away from the dialogue and make them ask questions like how the hell it's possible to "grunt" a sentence.
2. The sentence shouldn't include words or phrases that are unnecessary or that say nothing. The original post here mentioned the phrases, "The fact that," "the fact is," and "the fact of the matter." The fact of the matter is that such phrases usually sound good, and tend to reflect the way people talk, but they don't actually say anything; they add nothing of substance to the sentence. Same thing with words like "very," and "extremely." They are fluff words, and they contribute to an overall lack of clarity.
Adherence to these two rules should not affect a writer's "voice" at all. If your "voice" depends upon vagueness and meaningless phrases to work, I would kindly suggest that your writing is weaker than you think it is. Also, just because someone managed to get away with flubs and weak writing in a bestseller doesn't make it OK.
1. The sentence or phrase should read smoothly and clearly. When you read the sentence, do you stumble over the syntax or become confused about what the subject is? For example, the reason that speech tags like "he breathed," "he exlaimed," etc. are so frowned upon is because hey draw the reader's attention away from the dialogue and make them ask questions like how the hell it's possible to "grunt" a sentence.
2. The sentence shouldn't include words or phrases that are unnecessary or that say nothing. The original post here mentioned the phrases, "The fact that," "the fact is," and "the fact of the matter." The fact of the matter is that such phrases usually sound good, and tend to reflect the way people talk, but they don't actually say anything; they add nothing of substance to the sentence. Same thing with words like "very," and "extremely." They are fluff words, and they contribute to an overall lack of clarity.
Adherence to these two rules should not affect a writer's "voice" at all. If your "voice" depends upon vagueness and meaningless phrases to work, I would kindly suggest that your writing is weaker than you think it is. Also, just because someone managed to get away with flubs and weak writing in a bestseller doesn't make it OK.
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Re: The rules of "stronger" writing... lol?
omg!!! I bow to your awesomeness!paravil wrote:For me, there are two basic "rules" that I use to assess the strength of writing at the sentence level:
1. The sentence or phrase should read smoothly and clearly. When you read the sentence, do you stumble over the syntax or become confused about what the subject is? For example, the reason that speech tags like "he breathed," "he exlaimed," etc. are so frowned upon is because hey draw the reader's attention away from the dialogue and make them ask questions like how the hell it's possible to "grunt" a sentence.
2. The sentence shouldn't include words or phrases that are unnecessary or that say nothing. The original post here mentioned the phrases, "The fact that," "the fact is," and "the fact of the matter." The fact of the matter is that such phrases usually sound good, and tend to reflect the way people talk, but they don't actually say anything; they add nothing of substance to the sentence. Same thing with words like "very," and "extremely." They are fluff words, and they contribute to an overall lack of clarity.
Adherence to these two rules should not affect a writer's "voice" at all. If your "voice" depends upon vagueness and meaningless phrases to work, I would kindly suggest that your writing is weaker than you think it is. Also, just because someone managed to get away with flubs and weak writing in a bestseller doesn't make it OK.
Re: The rules of "stronger" writing... lol?
I agree. Also, bestselling authors can get away with things that, plainly, would get an unpublished writer a form rejection. An unpublished writer plays by bestseller rules at their own peril.paravil wrote:Also, just because someone managed to get away with flubs and weak writing in a bestseller doesn't make it OK.
I should note, though, that I can think of plenty of bestselling novelists whose work never declines in quality just because they've hit it big. The point is, one cannot get sloppy before earning the stripes. Preferably, one never gets sloppy at all.
Urban fantasy, epic fantasy, and hot Norse elves. http://margolerwill.blogspot.com/
- J. T. SHEA
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Re: The rules of "stronger" writing... lol?
Steppe. '...if your using this that or the other style crutch to many times in to short a span.' should presumably read '...if you're using this, that, or the other style crutch too many times in too short a span.'?
And by 'as' and 'but' fetishes you really mean 'ass' and butt' fetishes? Oh, maybe not...
And by 'as' and 'but' fetishes you really mean 'ass' and butt' fetishes? Oh, maybe not...
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Re: The rules of "stronger" writing... lol?
lololololololololoolJ. T. SHEA wrote:Steppe. '...if your using this that or the other style crutch to many times in to short a span.' should presumably read '...if you're using this, that, or the other style crutch too many times in too short a span.'?
And by 'as' and 'but' fetishes you really mean 'ass' and butt' fetishes? Oh, maybe not...
Last edited by BrokenChain on June 5th, 2010, 10:39 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: The rules of "stronger" writing... lol?
Someone's being KINKY!
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