Something to remember in these political debates ... and in the wisdom given to us on how to write well.
WRITE SHORTER
Every extra word makes readers impatient in these short-attention span days.
Got to keep checking on those FB posts, you know.
Write as if each word cost you 50 cents. Shorter prose is more powerful.
SHRINK THOSE SENTENCES!
Tiny draws attention in this big world.
Long sentences make readers work too hard to get to your main point.
Break sentences into bite-size ideas. Be Hemingway not Longfellow.
PASSIVE IS THE NEW POISON
Passive voice sentences hide who is acting, creating uneasiness unconsciously in your reader. Not good!
Be the detective of your own sentences -- find out who is the actor in each sentence and link him to the verb.
ERASE JARGON. FOCUS ON CLARITY
Jargon and Tech words just make your readers feel stupid. Way bad.
It doesn't make you sound smart.
It makes you look as if you are talking down to your reader.
Tell your story as if you were relaying it to your mother or next door neighbor. Tell the tale to make the most impact to the most people.
PUSH TO THE HEAD OF THE LINE
Move key scenes and insights up as close to the front of your novel, chapter, sentence as you can.
You are not making a case in a court of law where you have to lay a foundation fact by fact.
You have only a few sentences to get the readers' attention.
Don't waste those few precious moments.
Grab your audience right out of the gate -- at the first sentence if possible.
CLUES
Authors use foreshadowing to hint at future important events.
Whether consciously or unconsciously,
readers pick up on these clues if
they read and use them to make predictions about what will happen later
in the story.
It creates tension and suspense, keeping the reader turning the pages.
AND DON'T FORGET
MY CHRISTMAS GHOST STORY
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