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Laddar... The Writer's Notebook: Craft Essays from Tin House123 | 3 | 214,776 |
(4.13) | Ingen/inga | The Writer's Notebook: Craft Essays from Tin House combines the best craft seminars in the history of the Tin House Summer Writers Workshop with a variety of essays written by some of Tin House's favorite authors, offering aspiring writers insight into the craft of writing.Dorothy Allison, Jim Shepard, Aimee Bender, Steve Almond, D. A. Powell, and others break down elements of craft and share insights into the joys and pains of their own writing. This cast of deeply respected poets and prose writers explore topics that vary from writing dialogue to the dos and don'ts of writing about sex. With how-tos, close readings, and personal anecdotes,The Writer's Notebook offers future scribes advice and inspiration.… (mer) |
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 Gå med i LibraryThing för att få reda på om du skulle tycka om den här boken. ▾Diskussioner ("Om"-länkar) Det finns inga diskussioner på LibraryThing om den här boken. » Lägg till fler författare Författarens namn | Roll | Typ av författare | Verk? | Status | Tin House | — | primär författare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat | Allison, Dorothy | Bidragsgivare | medförfattare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat | Almond, Steve | Bidragsgivare | medförfattare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat | Bass, Rick | Bidragsgivare | medförfattare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat | Bell, Susan | Bidragsgivare | medförfattare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat | Bender, Aimee | Bidragsgivare | medförfattare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat | Bernheimer, Kate | Bidragsgivare | medförfattare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat | Corin, Lucy | Bidragsgivare | medförfattare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat | Grimes, Tom | Bidragsgivare | medförfattare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat | Harvey, Matthea | Bidragsgivare | medförfattare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat | Keesey, Anna | Bidragsgivare | medförfattare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat | Krusoe, Jim | Bidragsgivare | medförfattare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat | Livesey, Margaret | Bidragsgivare | medförfattare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat | Montgomery, Lee | Inledning | medförfattare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat | Nelson, Antonya | Bidragsgivare | medförfattare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat | Offutt, Chris | Bidragsgivare | medförfattare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat | Powell, D. A. | Bidragsgivare | medförfattare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat | Rock, Peter | Bidragsgivare | medförfattare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat | Shepard, Jim | Bidragsgivare | medförfattare | alla utgåvor | bekräftat |
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▾Bokbeskrivningar The Writer's Notebook: Craft Essays from Tin House combines the best craft seminars in the history of the Tin House Summer Writers Workshop with a variety of essays written by some of Tin House's favorite authors, offering aspiring writers insight into the craft of writing.Dorothy Allison, Jim Shepard, Aimee Bender, Steve Almond, D. A. Powell, and others break down elements of craft and share insights into the joys and pains of their own writing. This cast of deeply respected poets and prose writers explore topics that vary from writing dialogue to the dos and don'ts of writing about sex. With how-tos, close readings, and personal anecdotes,The Writer's Notebook offers future scribes advice and inspiration. ▾Beskrivningar från bibliotek Inga biblioteksbeskrivningar kunde hittas. ▾Beskrivningar från medlemmar på LibraryThing
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Some nuggets:
In "Making a Scene," Anna Keesey quotes Marilyn Robinson saying, "the reader is patient, ... is you're showing something that is of significance and if your prose is good and if there are no missteps or squanderings of the reader's attention, then the reader will follow you anywhere."
Well, that's a lot of IFs! But I get it...
Chris Offutt writes about the difference between "polishing" and revising -- and I am guilty, guilty, guilty of the former and not so hot at the latter... I will hone a sentence until it absolutely gleams, not seeing the weakness all around it. This piece is the best in the book. "Revising requires a cruel and ruthless objectivity with which you essentially perform surgery on yourself without anesthesia" (207).
For Offutt, the first draft is pure vulnerability, which (hopefully) translates into what he calls "reader empathy." And that is not the space to be in to revise. The transition between the two is time -- letting that first draft sit. "Try to see what the story is, rather than what you are trying to force it into. If you've done that first draft successfully, you've tapped into your intuition, your impulses, your unconscious, your problems of the day, whatever emotional state you are in... [for revision] you need to forget what it is you've tried to do, look at the story, see what it has become, and begin to attempt to fix it, to revise it, to improve it" (209).
Offutt always cuts off the opening and closing of the first draft, since the story is usually starting later and ending sooner. He also keeps every draft separate (!) so that he can go back and see what he did (I would find this completely impossible). He is fearless -- switching scenes, combining characters, hatcheting exposition. But the polishing -- repeated words, punctuation etc. -- is the last thing to be done...
Another good quote. "Adverbs are the weakest words; verbs are the strongest. Many, many times I've found that I have the wrong verb so I'm attempting to cheat and modify the wrong verb by using an adverb" (212). Wiush it was shorter so I could put it on a tshirt.
Peter Rock also had a good quote from Julio Cortazar, quoting Hector Quiroga: "Tell the story as if it were only of interest to the small circle of your characters, of which you may be one. There is no other way to put life into the story."
In this exploration of show vs. tell, Rock goes on to say this. "Telling in stories often attempts to simplify, to clarify, but when it's really working, telling complicates and adds dimension to the experience of the story. It interprets situations and characters, and it invites us to do the same. It involves us" (239). (