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Edited on Mon Mar-31-08 03:16 PM by petgoat
I loved to read, but my own work always looked so dumb it humiliated me.
In college I always wrote papers by staying up all night the night before they were due, and whatever rolled off my typewriter in that first draft was my paper. I rarely went back to pick them up afterward.
I took creative writing classes and I'd do all my rewriting in the composition stage--scribbling and rescribbling, but once it was typed it stayed typed.
When I wrote a novel after college the only way I could bear to read my work-in-progress was to get good and drunk. What you have to do, as Anne Lamott said, is give yourself permission to write lousy first drafts. (In my case, I have to give myself permission to keep working on lousy tenth drafts.)
I've learned a few tricks for tightening and sharpening my prose, and now editing is my favorite part because I can see so much improvement as I cut away what's excessive and false and heighten what's true.
Ken Macrorie's book "Telling Writing" is a classic on improving your prose.
Steven King's "On Writing" is also very insightful.
Basic hints: cut adjectives and adverbs, prefer specific nouns ("mustang" not "horse") and verbs ("sprinted" not "went") to vague ones. Avoid verbs of being and use verbs of action instead. Avoid the passive voice and the negative construction. (Say "Avoid the negative construction" rather than "Don't use the negative construction.")
Watch out for "whiches" and "whoes." Sometimes they're right, but they're often a symptom of flabby writing. Look for places where a ten-sentence paragraph of description can be boiled down to just the most vivid, evocative, precisely right words in the paragraph. Pretend you're getting paid by the word for every word you can remove.
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