See how well your writing looks after not looking at it for a whole week.
Obsession and closeness cloud this thing of objectivity. It’s a beautiful thing to make your creation newer with the recession of memory and passage of time.
See how well your writing looks after not looking at it for a whole week.
Obsession and closeness cloud this thing of objectivity. It’s a beautiful thing to make your creation newer with the recession of memory and passage of time.
From reading your writing, not writing.
Memory corrupts by addition, not omission. It fills in gaps and spaces that the fresher mind won’t think to add. Step away, let the narrative get more raw to your eyes.
That recall will tingle the sense, but your critical, editorial side attacks anew.
Time sharpens the knives toward your own work.
Every adjective needs a noun, but not every noun needs an adjective. Or something. It is indeed not a truth universally acknowledged that a powerful noun, object, thing is in need of some equally powerful, poignant, cheesy modifier.
We’re all guilty.
That’s why we’re Writing All Wrong.
Dear Writing All Wrong:
I know that you sometimes review writing, and you’re pribably [sic] going to make fun of me for it. That’s OK though, because I don’t think you get a lot of emails because people think you’re too mean. That’s also OK, because you’ll probably point out something I should be working on anyway. Anyway, here’s the first couple of chapters of my book, Unfinished Dawn.
[CHAPTERS REDACTED] (sorry.)
—Jeremy Stark, Westerville, Ohio.
You’re absolutely right. I’ll make fun of you. I am too mean. I don’t get a lot of email. And I’ll point out things you should be working on anyway. Like adjectives and modifiers.
“coiled, razor-sharp, Concertina wire” — Glad you cleared up the confusion here, since Concertina wire comes in a “fluffy bunny” variety.
“smoldering remains and scattered ruins” — Other than ‘and,’ the rest of these words can go.
“He peered grimly through the charcoal ichor of foglike black ephemera.” — This sounds like what a chimney sweep would write about himself to make his work seem interesting.
“He was heavily armed with an AA-12 Automatic shotgun, a potent pair of Glock G26 9mm subcompact pistols, M67 fragmentations grenades strung together like cloves of garlic on his sash, and a custom-designed IMI Tavor TAR-21 assault rifle.” — Too many numbers, clumsy mixed metaphors, weak modifiers (“custom-designed?”). Are you writing gun-owner fanfic here, or are you going to include a copy of Solider of Fortune for reference?
“The now-cool black clouds of night’s closing pages were turned by the warm, gentle fingers of amberlike dawn’s eager arrival.” — There’s a word for this: sunrise. Use that.
If you’re doing more describing than you are writing, you’re doing it wrong.
Writing All Wrong can be reached via email (WritingAllWrong@me.com) and followed on Twitter (@WritingAllWrong).