Found 107 posts tagged ‘writing’ |


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The Right Word –
September 15, 2015 |
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We checked, and we're pleased that our one and only bit of advice to writers is a Googlewhack. The only other person to have said this is the poet Eric Pankey, in The Journal of the Virginia Writing Project (Winter 2004): " Change all similes to metaphors." A simile, with that pesky word "like," "draws attention to itself as a simile" (which we ourselves say but which we found quoted elsewhere because things sound better when others say them, such as John Bird in Mark Twain and Metaphor, 2007, or, perhaps even better, S. J. Harrison in "Meta-Imagery: Some Self-Reflexive Similes in Latin Epic": "[a simile] draws attention to its own formal status as a comparison").
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Restoring the Lost Sense –
October 29, 2014 |
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought –
March 29, 2011 |
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"Writing is just a version of reading." — Geof Huth. . . which reminds us of Hemingway's description of "eyes like inkwells."
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought –
January 10, 2011 |
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"Writing is just the process of reading backwards, of unpacking from the skull what watching has filled the head with." — Geof Huth--- Daryl Griffiths writes: Via beauty of the timing of this statement I am ordered to intervene. From yesterday it certainly arrives and demands to know what time is it today, while hoping it not be tomorrow.
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The Right Word –
December 26, 2008 |
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"How to establish the exact moment in which a story begins? Everything has already begun before, the first line of the first page of every novel refers to something that has already happened outside the book. Or else the real story is the one that begins ten or a hundred pages further on, and everything that precedes it is only a prologue." — Italo Calvino, If On a Winter's Night a Traveler (We need not mention how wonderful this book is.)
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The Right Word –
December 17, 2008 |
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"The more gray and ordinary and undistinguished and commonplace the beginning of this novel is, the more you and the author feel a hint of danger looking over that fraction of 'I' that you have heedlessly invested in the 'I' of a character whose inner history you know nothing about." — Italo Calvino, If On a Winter's Night a Traveler
Sixteenth century illustration by Geoffroy Tory. --- Jeff writes: I can relate. How well do we know that other i, really?
Prof. Oddfellow writes: I learned the hard way that the other i's life is dotted with glamorous parties but also secrets and deceptions.
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