Monday, February 8, 2010
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Thought for the day...
How does technology inspire/hinder your writing? How can you add or delete it from your life to foster a better writing environment?
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
Typos, Grammar Woes, and Your Credibility as a Blogger
A blog post is not a school paper or a newspaper article. So, if you have a few typos and grammatical errors it doesn’t really matter, right? Wrong. One of the most important things for a blogger is establishing credibility. If we really want people to read our blog and keep coming back to it, we have to be credible. There are so many factors that contribute to credibility that it’s easy for some to get lost in the shuffle. It should go without saying that we have to know what we’re writing about and present our content in the proper way. This means not spouting off generalizations or random “facts” without backing them up or explaining our reasoning. But, it’s also about how we present our content physically.
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
Campfire Writing: Why Stories are the Writer’s Elemental Tool
The Magic and Power of Story
As a writer, it is not words, but stories, that are your elemental tool. Stories are an enchanting magic that grip the reader to the page.
Here is the power of storytelling: People make sense of the world through stories.
Stories are fundamental to being human. Without stories, life would appear as a meaningless jumble of facts and ideas. Stories make facts, and great ideas, meaningful. They connect with the everyday life and experience of their listeners or readers.
“The universe is made of stories, not of atoms.”
~ Muriel Rukeyser
Monday, June 8, 2009
Typescript
A friend I've known since college (fellow English major) created a great website called "Typescript" that you may want to check out:
"At Typescript, I share with you my own writing in the form of a character collection. The Annie Summer Series began in May 2008 as a challenge to start writing again, using song lyrics and titles as prompts for new stories. What began as a single short story has resulted in a character with plenty to say and even more to experience, opening up a fictional world and leading to a collection of short stories based around her summer of 1979. Enjoy her Twitter profile and get some insight into her life leading up to her summer adventures."
The site also features writing challenges and giveaways.
"At Typescript, I share with you my own writing in the form of a character collection. The Annie Summer Series began in May 2008 as a challenge to start writing again, using song lyrics and titles as prompts for new stories. What began as a single short story has resulted in a character with plenty to say and even more to experience, opening up a fictional world and leading to a collection of short stories based around her summer of 1979. Enjoy her Twitter profile and get some insight into her life leading up to her summer adventures."
The site also features writing challenges and giveaways.
Thursday, April 23, 2009
Is the Semicolon Worth Saving?
reblog from The Thursday File
by Richard Nordquist -- April 13, 2009
The author of The Gutenberg Elegies, English professor Sven Birkerts, once said in an interview, "I never see a sentence with a semicolon in it anymore. People don't tend to read the kind of writing that has semicolons. We tend to read the prose of the age, and the prose of the age, influenced by the ethos of electronic communication, is almost overwhelmingly flat, punchy and declarative.''
Birkerts made that observation a decade ago--well before the arrival of such punctuation killers as Facebook, Twitter, and the iPhone.
What we'd like to know is whether you have any use for the semicolon and if you think the mark is worth preserving.
Some Say Yes
Not many people use it much any more, do they? Should it be used more? I think so, yes. A semicolon is a partial pause, a different way of pausing, without using a full stop. I use it all the time.
(British novelist Beryl Bainbridge)
With educated people, I suppose, punctuation is a matter of rule; with me it is a matter of feeling. But I must say I have a great respect for the semi-colon; it's a useful little chap.
(President Abraham Lincoln)
You practically do not use semicolons at all. This is a symptom of mental defectiveness, probably induced by camp life.
(George Bernard Shaw to T.E. Lawrence, on The Seven Pillars of Wisdom)
Sometimes you get a glimpse of a semicolon coming, a few lines farther on, and it is like climbing a steep path through woods and seeing a wooden bench just at a bend in the road ahead, a place where you can expect to sit for a moment, catching your breath.
(American essayist Lewis Thomas)
Some Say No
Do not use semicolons. They are transvestite hermaphrodites, standing for absolutely nothing. All they do is show you've been to college.
(American novelist Kurt Vonnegut)
As readers require information in segments that are shorter and easier to read, semicolons are becoming a less desirable form of punctuation. They encourage overlong sentences that slow down both reader and writer. You can virtually eliminate semicolons and still be a fine writer.
(Deborah Dumaine, Instant-Answer Guide to Business Writing, 2003)
Did you know by the way that this book [Coming Up for Air] hasn't got a semicolon in it? I decided about that time that the semicolon is an unnecessary stop and that I would write my next book without one.
(British novelist and essayist George Orwell in a letter to his editor at Secker & Warburg)
Too many semicolons are tedious for the reader. Semicolons are also more characteristic of formal or literary writing, which means that some readers may not be accustomed to them. If your readers don't understand the semicolon, it will be more of a distraction than an aid.
(Jill Meryl Levy, Take Command of Your Writing, 1998)
by Richard Nordquist -- April 13, 2009
The author of The Gutenberg Elegies, English professor Sven Birkerts, once said in an interview, "I never see a sentence with a semicolon in it anymore. People don't tend to read the kind of writing that has semicolons. We tend to read the prose of the age, and the prose of the age, influenced by the ethos of electronic communication, is almost overwhelmingly flat, punchy and declarative.''
Birkerts made that observation a decade ago--well before the arrival of such punctuation killers as Facebook, Twitter, and the iPhone.
What we'd like to know is whether you have any use for the semicolon and if you think the mark is worth preserving.
Some Say Yes
Not many people use it much any more, do they? Should it be used more? I think so, yes. A semicolon is a partial pause, a different way of pausing, without using a full stop. I use it all the time.
(British novelist Beryl Bainbridge)
With educated people, I suppose, punctuation is a matter of rule; with me it is a matter of feeling. But I must say I have a great respect for the semi-colon; it's a useful little chap.
(President Abraham Lincoln)
You practically do not use semicolons at all. This is a symptom of mental defectiveness, probably induced by camp life.
(George Bernard Shaw to T.E. Lawrence, on The Seven Pillars of Wisdom)
Sometimes you get a glimpse of a semicolon coming, a few lines farther on, and it is like climbing a steep path through woods and seeing a wooden bench just at a bend in the road ahead, a place where you can expect to sit for a moment, catching your breath.
(American essayist Lewis Thomas)
Some Say No
Do not use semicolons. They are transvestite hermaphrodites, standing for absolutely nothing. All they do is show you've been to college.
(American novelist Kurt Vonnegut)
As readers require information in segments that are shorter and easier to read, semicolons are becoming a less desirable form of punctuation. They encourage overlong sentences that slow down both reader and writer. You can virtually eliminate semicolons and still be a fine writer.
(Deborah Dumaine, Instant-Answer Guide to Business Writing, 2003)
Did you know by the way that this book [Coming Up for Air] hasn't got a semicolon in it? I decided about that time that the semicolon is an unnecessary stop and that I would write my next book without one.
(British novelist and essayist George Orwell in a letter to his editor at Secker & Warburg)
Too many semicolons are tedious for the reader. Semicolons are also more characteristic of formal or literary writing, which means that some readers may not be accustomed to them. If your readers don't understand the semicolon, it will be more of a distraction than an aid.
(Jill Meryl Levy, Take Command of Your Writing, 1998)
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
For new readers of this blog:
A few months ago, we gave you info about the opportunity to get free books from Thomas Nelson Publishing if you agree to become one of their online reviewers. Here is the link again: http://brb.thomasnelson.com/
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)