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Writing
With Power: 5 Snappy Rules For Success |
by:
Christopher
Brown |
Almost everyone could profit from enhancing
their writing skills. From writing more
crisp meta-tags - which search engine bots
find quite sexy - to turbo-charging your
blog readership by writing with punch, a
skilled pen can propel any online effort
in the right direction. But who has the
time, money or know-how to tackle this daunting
task, right? On the contrary, I have just
the free and powerful writing clinic for
you. We have named it "Writing With Power."
And did I mention it's free?
Here, we - my friends and I - aim to lend
a boost to your writing skills fast. We
do this for people all the time by showing
them how to use George Orwell's oh-so-practical
principles of good writing. Today, I will
offer five of them, and show you how to
use them with ease. But first I must introduce
you to an odd sort of person, whom I call,
"Homo Graphicus," and he stars in a very
popular fib dubbed the "Myth of the Great
Writer."
What does he do? He sits far back in the
recesses of your mind, whittling away at
another masterpiece. For, you see, he flawlessly
crafts only the finest specimens of the
literary art, and he does so day-in and
day-out. No piles of crumpled paper wads
litter his desk or the floor, and he doesn't
DO erasers. He simply presses the "insight"
button, absorbs the inspired notion, and,
with a flick of the wrist, returns to churning
out his next scripted champion.
Now, the good news for those of us with
all the creative flare of peet moss is this:
this man does not exist. There are no great
writers. The world knows only great rewriters.
The way to produce a fine piece of writing
comes by outlining briefly what you wish
to say, filling out the floor plan with
a few data from your research, and then
by sifting carefully through the first draft
many times - systematically. Just follow
the rules, step-by-step.
So where's the love? It comes by filtering
the unruly items from your draft (with our
rules), and replacing them with the beloved
features of good writing. Here, you take
your very rough draft - and some will prove
rougher than others - and purge from it
all the dross in a step-by-step fashion,
with rules simple enough for clever pets
to follow. Even Cocoa could do this.
Our first rule, we shall say this way: prefer
concrete nouns to the abstract. By "concrete"
I mean to suggest that you should employ
the kinds of nouns we can all see, taste,
smell, hear and see. This would include
peanut butter, cars, frying pans, and DVD's.
Abstract nouns, on the other hand, insist
on playing hide-and-seek from our five senses.
Most of the badly overused ones end in "-tion."
These include words like marginalization,
utilization, and transportation. Good rewriters
will make every effort to paint pictures,
so to speak, in the minds of their readers.
Do not simply tell them, SHOW them. Now
be assured that no one has the foggiest
idea what "marginalization" looks like,
but we all know a marshmallow when we see
one. Paint vivid, lustrous - even golden
- pictures in your readers' minds. Use images
that drip honey. So replace the do-nothing
abstract nouns in your draft with smoldering
wicks, chandeliers of fiery brass, and shimmering
scarlet wine (preferably California Cabernets).
Moving on to rule number two, we encourage
good rewriters to supplant verb forms of
"to be" (e.g. was, were, are, am, will be)
with active verbs. Adorn your draft with
highly-caffeinated words that careen, thunder,
swoop, roar, derail and dance. Comatose
words like "is" barely manage to register
a heartbeat as verbs. They portray nothing
at all. Some politicians, it is rumored,
do not even know what the meaning of "is"
really is. Yet, who can blame them for wanting
to defrock such a flimsy and haggard word?
As a good rewriter, you must convict and
impeach these lackluster, worthless, and
dull-witted imposters - meaning, of course,
lazy verbs - not the politicians.
Under the rubric of rule three, good rewriting
will insist that you vary your word choices.
Do not employ the same words too often.
This means you must scan the draft to spy
out the repeat offenders, so you can give
their space to an underemployed synonym.
You can plunder any good thesaurus to get
these. Variety remains THE spice central
to good writing, so spice it up.
Rule number four for good rewriting warns
us to keep it short and snappy. Take a step
back form your paper for a moment to clean
it up now. Go ahead and give your draft
a clean shave, and take a little off the
top. Trimming from your draft excess words,
phrases, and perhaps even sentences, will
ensure clear writing that gets right to
the point. If your sentence says it in twenty
words, find a way to say it in, maybe, fifteen.
But watch out for nicks and cuts. Never
toss out any important ideas or words essential
to your writing task. Yet, when it doubt,
throw it out - or at the least - give it
a fair snipping to keep it lean.
Finally, rule number five bids good rewriters
juggle their sentence lengths. Mix it up.
If your first sentence spans only a few
words, follow this with a lengthier one.
Then chase that one with a mid-length sentence.
This creates an almost enchanting, writing
"flow"- where your readers wonder what will
come next. This subtle variety in your writing
style draws the reader in, and keeps her
coming back. And we know that keeping readers
interested remains the best way to keep
them.
Now these rules work very well and can improve
your writing immensely almost at once, but
only if you put them to use. On such topics
as these, of course, I have much more to
say. And I hasten to do so at: http//:scriberight.blogspot.com,
giving examples, tips and great resources
along the way. Remember, you will need to
rely heavily on a fairly comprehensive thesaurus.
Don't be afraid to invest a little in this
venture.
All the best efforts of the academic world
have not managed to prevent the current
shortage of good rewriters. Most folks still
cling to the "Myth of the Great Writer,"
and this hinders them from jumping straightway
into the river of personal advancement.
Don't let a literary fiction keep you from
securing your own set of extremely marketable
and valuable skills with a little effort
and practice. Start today, and come on in
- the water is fine. And did I mention that
it's free?
About the author:
Carson Day has written approximately 1.3
gazillion articles and essays, many with
very insightful, if alternative, viewpoints.
He presently writes for Ophir Gold Corporation,
and specialized in the history of ideas
in college. He has been quoted in the past
as saying "What box?" and remains at large
despite the best efforts of the civil authorities.
You can visit the Ophir Gold Corporation
blogsites at http://scriberight.blogspot.com
(Writing With Power), http://ophirgoldcorp.blogspot.com
(OGC's Free Web Traffic), or http://ophirgold.blogspot.com
(Church and State 101)
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