Murder your darlings And other gentle writing advice from Aristotle to Zinsser

Roy Peter Clark

Book - 2020

A collection of over a hundred writing tips gleaned from fifty popular writing books. Chapters are devoted to each key strategy. Author expands and contextualizes original authors' suggestions and shares how each tip helped other authors improve their skills.

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Subjects
Genres
Handbooks and manuals
Case studies
Anecdotes
Published
New York : Little, Brown Spark 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Roy Peter Clark (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
ix, 340 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 319-328) and index.
ISBN
9780316481885
  • A writing book about writing books
  • Language and craft. Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch : Murder your darlings ; William Zinsser : Find and cut the clutter ; Donald Hall : Learn to live inside words ; George Campbell : Shape a sentence for the desired effect ; John McPhee : Work from a plan
  • Voice and style. William Strunk Jr. and E. B. White : Recognize two contradictory meanings of style ; Gary Provost and Ursula K. Le Guin : Vary sentence length to create a pleasing rhythm ; Vera John-Steiner : Use visual markings to spark your creative process ; Constance Hale and Jessie Scanlon : Tune your voice for the digital age ; Ben Yagoda : Turn the dials that adjust the way you sound as a writer
  • Confidence and identity. Donald Murray : Learn the steps of the writing process ; Anne Lamott : Keep writing, things will get better ; Peter Elbow : Write freely to discover what you want to say ; Dorothea Brande and Brenda Ueland : Say it loud : "I am a writer" ; Stephen King : Develop the writing habit
  • Storytelling and character. Brian Boyd : Understand the value of storytelling ; James Wood : Prefer the complex human narrator ; Northrop Frye : Write for sequence, then for theme ; Lajos Egri : Distill your story into five words, maybe three ; E. M. Forster : Add dimension to characters ; Gay Talese and Tom Wolfe : Report for story
  • Rhetoric and audience. Louise M. Rosenblatt : Anticipate the needs of readers ; Quintilian : Embrace rhetoric as the source of language power ; Aristotle : Influence the emotional responses of your audience ; Vivian Gornick and Mary Karr : Sign a social contract with the reader ; Rudolf Flesch and Robert Gunning : Write to the level of your reader, and a little higher
  • Mission and purpose. S. I Hayakawa : Learn the strategies that make reports reliable ; Kurt Vonnegut and Lee Stringer : Write to make your soul grow ; Horace : Write to delight and instruct ; Edward R. Murrow : Become the eyes and ears of the audience ; Aldous Huxley, George Orwell, and Neil Postman : Choose advocacy over propaganda ; Natalie Goldberg and Charles Johnson : Be a writer, and so much more
  • Appendix : Books by Roy Peter Clark.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A jam-packed book of advice for would-be writers.Poynter Institute senior scholar Clark (The Art of X-Ray Reading: How the Secrets of 25 Great Works of Literature Will Improve Your Writing, 2017, etc.) has become something of a guru when it comes to how-to writing books. Written in his usual easygoing, conversational, and encouraging style, his latest is a compilation of writing advice from more than 50 of his favorite books about writing. Covering a wide range of topics, including language and craft, voice and style, storytelling and character, and rhetoric and audience, the author focuses on one or two writing lessons from each book. In each chapter, Clark also provides a pedagogical "Tool Box" of ideas and suggestions and "Lessons" for students to try out: "Read a lot and write a lot"; "Write Up to your readers, not Down." The book's title comes from Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch's On the Art of Writing (1916), in which the author suggested, "Draft, purge, murder. Before you murder that darling, you must create it." Clark argues that William Strunk Jr. and E.B. White's The Elements of Style is the "great-granddaddy" of all books on writing. For "millions of reluctant writers," it told them that the "writing craft is not an act of magic, but the applied use of both rules and tools." Besides the old standards, there are some nice surprisese.g., George Campbell's The Philosophy of Rhetoric, a "must read" that "was published in a significant year: 1776." Stephen King's "odd bit of advice" in On Writingto read "bad writing so you can learn what not to write"is practical and wise. Clark deftly mixes writing advice with personal memoir and toots his own horn in an appendix that includes summaries of his own books, including Writing Tools"more than 200,000 copies have been sold in several formats."A generous, witty, and exuberant teacher inspires writers to "know more and feel more." Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.