J
JAMESBJOHNSON
Guest
Do you have writing tricks you wont reveal or share with anyone? Stuff you discovered thats not in any how-to-write manual?
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Do you have writing tricks you wont reveal or share with anyone? Stuff you discovered thats not in any how-to-write manual?
You can't fool yourself and you can't fool the reader. If you think there's something you should work on, but convince yourself you can get away with it and the readers won't notice, they will.
STORYMAN
Youre describing eidetic imaging; that is, your brain's ability to form photograph-like visuals. Some call it 'photographic memory.' Plenty or morons have the trait, and plenty of them use the trait to pass tests to become MDs and lawyers and politicians. We call them idiot-savants, RAINMAN was one.
But my thread question is about tricks you discover on your own that have nuthin to do with physiology or formal training. I'm talking Houdini NOT Mister Ed.
A horse is a horse, of course, of course,
And no one can talk to a horse of course
That is, of course, unless the horse is the famous Mister Ed.
Go right to the source and ask the horse
He'll give you the answer that you'll endorse.
He's always on a steady course.
Talk to Mister Ed.
People yakkity yak a streak and waste your time of day
But Mr. Ed will never speak unless he has something to say
A horse is a horse, of course, of course,
And this one'll talk 'til his voice is hoarse.
You never heard of a talking horse?
Well listen to this: "I'm Mister Ed."
Do you have writing tricks you wont reveal or share with anyone? Stuff you discovered thats not in any how-to-write manual?
Ouch!!!! I feel like i've been stabbed.... compared to a damn laywer???? how low can one sink?
Do you have writing tricks you wont reveal or share with anyone? Stuff you discovered thats not in any how-to-write manual?
Can you give an example of a "trick"?
There aren't any "tricks" but there are lots of techniques.
Here's a trick. When I come across an amazing name in real life or discovered in the newspaper I save it in a file for future use. Like 'Lardaz.' You cant make up names like this one. I suspect Charles Dickens did the same.
One of the better "tricks" I've employed (certainly not my own, nor a secret to anyone who can adjust to reality) is to drop imprisonment by many of the "rules" of writing I learned up through high school and work at "speaking" to the reader within their conversational comfort zone without distracting them with needless departure from what their unconscious expects to see in grammar, punctuation, and spelling.
That's not exactly a new trick, JBJ. I think many of us do it. So ... new trick?Here's a trick. When I come across an amazing name in real life or discovered in the newspaper I save it in a file for future use. Like 'Lardaz.' You cant make up names like this one. I suspect Charles Dickens did the same.
If I follow you, what you do is a hard task to master.
At one point all the spam I got for a week had the most wonderfully allegorical "names." I compiled a list of more than 200 names from that week. Never seen another run like it.Here's a trick. When I come across an amazing name in real life or discovered in the newspaper I save it in a file for future use. Like 'Lardaz.' You cant make up names like this one. I suspect Charles Dickens did the same.
I think the primary problem is finding the groove the first couple of times and then remembering to go there. Perhaps the "secret" part is that readers react best to writing that disappears and just leaves them with the story/characters and experiencing it on their own ground. To do that, a writer has to put the reader in his/her comfort zone. One example of doing that (but just one) would be letting a cliche or two filter through, meeting the reader where they really are in the world, rather than dropping bag fulls of brilliant new image words and terms on them left and right.
I think I benefited from an early kick in the ass on this one. I wanted to impress in high school English, so in all of my written work, I followed the rules and formulas to a T and wore out my Roget's. Most always got a B+ for my effort. On the last written assignment of the year, I thought, what the hell, and just let out all of the stops and dashed something out at one go with no concern for spelling, punctuation, or word usage at all. The teacher's comment written beside the A+ grade was "Now, you're a writer." The kicker, though, is that I'd absorbed all of that spelling, punctuation, and grammar stuff so that I could use it without intentionally thinking of the "rules." Learning this "secret" propelled me well into college English.
I think the primary problem is finding the groove the first couple of times and then remembering to go there. Perhaps the "secret" part is that readers react best to writing that disappears and just leaves them with the story/characters and experiencing it on their own ground. To do that, a writer has to put the reader in his/her comfort zone. One example of doing that (but just one) would be letting a cliche or two filter through, meeting the reader where they really are in the world, rather than dropping bag fulls of brilliant new image words and terms on them left and right.
I think I benefited from an early kick in the ass on this one. I wanted to impress in high school English, so in all of my written work, I followed the rules and formulas to a T and wore out my Roget's. Most always got a B+ for my effort. On the last written assignment of the year, I thought, what the hell, and just let out all of the stops and dashed something out at one go with no concern for spelling, punctuation, or word usage at all. The teacher's comment written beside the A+ grade was "Now, you're a writer." The kicker, though, is that I'd absorbed all of that spelling, punctuation, and grammar stuff so that I could use it without intentionally thinking of the "rules." Learning this "secret" propelled me well into college English.
Too perfect is jarring.
Too many errors is distracting.
Fragments, contractions, slang . . . disappear because they're normal.
Right? Or am I not reading you right?
No on the first. Yes on the second.Do you have writing tricks you wont reveal or share with anyone? Stuff you discovered thats not in any how-to-write manual?