Now Write!
Fiction Writing Exercises from Today's Best Writers and Teachers
Sherry Ellis - Author
Summary of Now Write!
Summary of Now Write!
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A collection of personal writing exercises and commentary from some of today's best novelists, short story writers, and writing teachers, including Jill McCorkle, Amy Bloom, Robert Olen Butler, Steve Almond, Jayne Anne Phillips, Virgil Suarez, Margot Livesay, and more.
What's the secret behind the successful and prolific careers of critically acclaimed novelists and short story writers Amy Bloom, Steve Almond, Jayne Anne Phillips, Alison Lurie, and others? Divine assistance? Otherworldly talent? An unsettlingly close relationship with the Muse? While the rest of us are staring at blank sheets of paper, struggling to come up with a first sentence, these writers are busy polishing off story after story and novel after novel. Despite producing work that may seem effortless, all of them have a simple technique for fending off writer's block: the writing exercise. In Now Write!, Sherry Ellis collects the personal writing exercises of today's best writers and lays bare the secret to their success. - In "The Photograph," Jill McCorkle divulges one of her tactics for handling material that takes plots in a million different directions; - National Book Award-nominee Amy Bloom offers "Water Buddies," an exercise for writers practicing their craft in workshops; - Steve Almond, author of My Life in Heavy Metal and Candyfreak, provides a way to avoiding purple prose in "The Five-Second Shortcut to Writing in the Lyric Register"; - and eighty-three more of the country's top writers disclose their strategies for creating memorable prose. Complemented by brief commentary from the authors themselves, the exercises in Now Write! are practical and hands-on. By encouraging writers to shamelessly steal proven techniques that have yielded books which have won National Book Awards, Pulitzers, and Guggenheim grants, Now Write! inspires the aspiring writer to write now. Wedding Pictures Through the Senses My Pet Two People Come Out of a Building and Into a Story The Seed Truthful Dare The Photograph The Prefab Story Exercise The Upside-Down Bird: Hybridizing Memory, Place, and Invention A Map to Anywhere Starting with the News Wedding Cake Assignment A Tabula Rasa Experiment Collage The Five Senses Birth of a Story in an Hour or Less Surrealism Exercise, or Thinking Outside the Box Overcoming Dry Spells Field Trip Smushing Seed Ideas Together The Writing Exercise: A Recipe Story to Tell First-Person Point of View: Imagining and Inhabiting Character You-Me-I-You in the Cafeteria Getting Characters' Ages Right What Are They Thinking? A Point-of-View Exercise Third-Person Narration and "Psychic Distance" Look Backward, Angel Let the Dead Speak: An Exercise in First-Person Narration Empathy and the Creation of Character What's Under the Surface? The Interview "Once Upon a Time": Playing with Time in Fiction Why I Stole It Language Portrait Paw Through Their Pockets, Rifle Through Their Drawers Mr. Samsa, Meet Bartleby Rattlesnake in the Drawer A Family Theme, a Family Secret Characters in Conflict The Voyager: Write What You Don't Know Getting Dramatic Developing Your Characters The Way They Do the Things They Do Braiding time Snoop 'Da Dialogue Dialogue Without Words Hearing Voices Dialogue Exercise: The Non-Apology Level of Dialogue Fictional Building Blocks Keep the Engine Running The Riff Storyboard Your Story Sticking to the Structure What Am I Writing About? Clarifying Story Ideas Through Summary The Richness of Resonance Setting in Fiction The Character of Setting Animating the Inanimate Learning to Layer A Sense of Place Be the Tree A Very, Very Long Sentence Most Memorable Food: Using Sensory Detail Like Water for Words: A Simile Exercise Finding a Larger Truth by Turning Autobiography into Fiction Secrets of the Great Scene Hemingway's Caroms: Descriptive Showing and Telling How to Own a Story Object Lessons The Goldilocks Method Big Scenes Moving Through Time: A Four-Paragraph Short Short Using the Retrospective Lens Water Buddies Listening to Sound to Find Sense Entrances: Building Bigger Scenes The Five-Second Shortcut to Writing in the Lyric Register Meaning Making Via Metaphor Soundtracking Your Story Negative Capability Seven Drafts in Seven Days More Is More: An Exercise in Revising Your Story Potholes The Dark Matter: Twenty Issues in Novel Revision Acknowledgments Credits About the Editor |
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