Introduction: A Writing Book about Writing Books |
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3 | (8) |
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Part I Language and Craft |
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11 | (36) |
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1 Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch: Murder your darlings |
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13 | (7) |
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2 William Zinsser: Find and cut the clutter |
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20 | (7) |
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3 Donald Hall: Learn to live inside words |
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27 | (7) |
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4 George Campbell: Shape a sentence for the desired effect |
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34 | (7) |
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5 John McPhee: Work from a plan |
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41 | (6) |
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47 | (50) |
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6 William Strunk Jr. and E. B. White: Recognize two contradictory meanings of style |
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49 | (9) |
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7 Gary Provost and Ursula K. Le Guin: Vary sentence length to create a pleasing rhythm |
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58 | (10) |
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8 Vera John-Steiner: Use visual markings to spark your creative process |
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68 | (10) |
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9 Constance Hale and Jessie Scanlon: Tune your voice for the digital age |
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78 | (8) |
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10 Ben Yagoda: Turn the dials that adjust the way you sound as a writer |
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86 | (11) |
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Part III Confidence and Identity |
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97 | (50) |
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11 Donald Murray: Learn the steps of the writing process |
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99 | (9) |
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12 Anne Lamott: Keep writing; things will get better |
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108 | (8) |
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13 Peter Elbow: Write freely to discover what you want to say |
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116 | (9) |
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14 Dorothea Brande and Brenda Ueland: Say it loud: "I am a writer." |
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125 | (14) |
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15 Stephen King: Develop the writing habit |
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139 | (8) |
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Part IV Storytelling and Character |
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147 | (56) |
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16 Brian Boyd: Understand the value of storytelling |
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149 | (11) |
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17 James Wood: Prefer the complex human narrator |
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160 | (10) |
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18 Northrop Frye: Write for sequence, then for theme |
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170 | (8) |
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19 Lajos Egri: Distill your story into five words--maybe three |
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178 | (7) |
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20 E. M. Forster: Add dimension to characters |
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185 | (8) |
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21 Gay Talese and Tom Wolfe: Report for story |
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193 | (10) |
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Part V Rhetoric and Audience |
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203 | (50) |
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22 Louise M. Rosenblatt: Anticipate the needs of readers |
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205 | (8) |
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23 Quintilian: Embrace rhetoric as the source of language power |
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213 | (7) |
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24 Aristotle: Influence the emotional responses of your audience |
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220 | (9) |
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25 Vivian Gornick and Mary Karr: Sign a social contract with the reader |
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229 | (10) |
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26 Rudolf Flesch and Robert Gunning: Write to the level of your reader--and a little higher |
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239 | (14) |
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Part VI Mission and Purpose |
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253 | (58) |
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27 S. I. Hayakawa: Learn the strategies that make reports reliable |
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255 | (10) |
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28 Kurt Vonnegut and Lee Stringer: Write to make your soul grow |
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265 | (8) |
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29 Horace: Write to delight and instruct |
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273 | (9) |
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30 Edward R. Murrow: Become the eyes and ears of the audience |
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282 | (9) |
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31 Aldous Huxley, George Orwell, and Neil Postman: Choose advocacy over propaganda |
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291 | (8) |
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32 Natalie Goldberg and Charles Johnson: Be a writer--and so much more |
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299 | (12) |
Afterword |
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311 | (2) |
Acknowledgments |
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313 | (3) |
Appendix: Books |
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316 | (3) |
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Bibliography |
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319 | (10) |
Index |
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329 | |