Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
does anyone pay for the subscription? I would, but I don't have enough stop to warrant joining for $25 a month.
Who edits your stuff? I find that I need to go back to 8th grade and learn English all over again.
No, I don't pay for grammarly. I do pay for the latest MLA Handbook, the APA Publication Manual, the Associated Press Stylebook and the annual Writer's Market.
None of which, going back to your first post, are for fiction. These authorities are all for one form of nonfiction or other only.![]()
None of which, going back to your first post, are for fiction. These authorities are all for one form of nonfiction or other only.![]()
Hey Beco. Don't forget - we're writing fiction which means dialogue, thoughts and pacing - all very different from nonfiction.
I think Kate DiCamillo is one of the best living writers today, and in her first book which won the highest possible award in American Children's literature, the Newbery Award, she had the following sentence: "And ugly." Talk about breaking so many rules. Thing is, she wrote it and left it, her editing team at Candlewick Press, which are very good, left it, and the entire panel of the ALA and ABA read it and still considered it the best thing written the year it came out.
We have STANDARDS of English usage - not so much verbatim rules. Of course, some things are so standardly used that it can be a matter of right or wrong.
8th grade? Common American English is actually at the 6th grade level according to the most recent studies and have been for quite some time. The current occupant in our Oval Office has been well documented for generally speaking at a fourth grade reading level.
Use the editor forum or find people you know and trust to at least read here or in real life. Another great trick is to read aloud from a printout - makes a world of difference.
Trust your own reading skills. Anne Lamott says she writes hours of utter crap and then spends many more hours chipping it down to decent stuff.
Good luck and happy writing!
I just remember my 8th grade English teacher for some reason... I'm not sure I learned all that much, but its her I rememberr, older gray haired lady....go figure
Why do I see plot bunnies in the mature category from that answer?![]()
![]()
Not in my erotica writings, but perhaps a plot in my other nonfiction. I didn't like her. She was old and mean....although she did like my fictional writings
Good call Pilot!
I guess the correct answer is I don't pay for any. Although the Writer's Market does help with fiction writing, beyond places to sell, in the articles in the front.
I overlooked the reference to Writer's Market. I'm not sure what helps it gives on grammar, either fiction or nonfiction, but that may mean that I don't check on that.
None of which, going back to your first post, are for fiction. These authorities are all for one form of nonfiction or other only.![]()
So in your opinion what would be a good fiction guide?
Also...at what point does the 'well, it doesn't apply to fiction" begin to apply? In other words there has to be a point where bad grammar can't be covered by its fiction we do what we want...
Or is fiction that lawless?
I read topics like this and am ashamed.
Both my wife and I add our short true stories to Lit. Neither of us are writers and don't attempt to be. In fact my wife got pregnant, dropped out during her Junior year of high school, and has short term dementia. She has to read my notes or ask me for details. I didn't do bad in high school English or Drama class.
We don't read books and haven't been to a movie since the drive-in theaters and X-rated movie houses. So we have no idea about different writing styles. I did try an editor for a few stories early on. He/she was helpful but now I mostly just read the stories over a few times and make changes. Lots of changes and admittidly usually still not enough. Yet our stories have amused half drunk perverts for years. Hopefully there are a few here.
Mostly my writing is in the style as the stories were actually told around the campfire or in small local smoke filled bars. Much of the adult language and slightly graphic detail is added just to make a few Lit readers happy.
There are two reasons we joined Lit. People repeatedly told me to write a book or go on an adult site to share our stories. The other reason is we hope at least a few others will read our stories and try a few of the embarrassing things we've done in the past 60 years.
We have more stories but feel it's all been a waste of time. We aren't very grammarly.
So in your opinion what would be a good fiction guide?
Also...at what point does the 'well, it doesn't apply to fiction" begin to apply? In other words there has to be a point where bad grammar can't be covered by its fiction we do what we want...
Or is fiction that lawless?
I read topics like this and am ashamed.
We have more stories but feel it's all been a waste of time. We aren't very grammarly.
It's a mixture.
"And ugly." is about as lawless as you can get.
But as SimonDoom points out some things are just plain wrong. Homophones for example (I didn't just say 'things are plane wrong.') Verb tense is another. Usage of good/well, lie/lay (and I'll admit I still screw those two up especially in the other tenses) affect/effect. 'Irregardless' - it ain't a word.
Basic punctuation (end punctuation and commas) for sentence structure should be followed but that quickly gets into gray territory for pacing or dialogue purposes.
I think lawlessness comes into play when we do something because it sounds good rather than looks correct.
My two cents, and I've rarely been paid for my two cents.![]()
Although better than nothing, Strunk & White was written to support high school themes, not much commercial fiction being written in high school. One step up from there, Turabian's A Manual for Writers is there to support college research papers. Not much fiction being written in the form of a college research paper.