| Atricle Dump |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Writing and Speaking > Writing > Revise, Revise, Revise |
|
Atricle Dump - Revise, Revise, Revise
Investing Psychology p>Word choice is a topic that would create a full article in itself, but it is a vital part of good writing.Let me share an inspirational story with you, a metaphor which was the catalyst of my personal growth financially and my very own paradigm shift.Busy working or being financially productive!Once upon a time a very strong woodcutter asked for a job in a timber mill, and he got it. The pay was really good and so were the work conditions. For that reason, the woodcutter was determined to do his best. His boss gave him an axe and showed him the area where he was supposed to work. The first week, the woodcutter cut down 18 trees. "Congratulations," the boss said. "Continue going that way!"Very motivated to hear the boss' words, the woodcutter tried harder the next week, but he only could bring 15 trees. The third week he tried even harder, but he can only 6. Concentrate on enhancement. Enhancement goes beyond making corrections and improving content and style: It means increasing the quality and impact of the writing. A few techniques given by McCarver are as follows: * Inserting foreshadowing for greater event impact later. 7. Do that final revision. After finishing the whole manuscript, revise again. 8. Take one last look. After revising the complete manuscript again, the author should reread the printed pages before mailing them or sending a query letter. All errors and last minute changes should be made. All authors want to impress editors Where To Sell Your Information Products Online For the past two or three years I've read and heard, "Don't do any revising or editing until you have finished writing the whole story or book."You’ve discovered a niche just waiting for a prime solution to their problems. Then you set out to create a mouth-watering solution no savvy consumer could turn his or her back on. So where do you list this information product for sale so that it can be found by the people who need it most?You have several options in setting up your system. The most well-known information product bank on the Net is ClickBank. ClickBank allows you to pay a small registration fee and place your information product in their massive marketplace.You get to set the price of the product and also have ClickBank handle your affiliate program needs. With an affiliate army, you don’t have to do as much promoting, since they’ll be driving highly targeted traffic to the sales page f What? That goes against common sense and everything I've learned in all the years I've studied, have written, have taught, and have read. The reasons I disagree are several, but a main one (and I've seen examples of this too many times) is if an author waits until after he finishes and then changes something toward the start, he often forgets a later part of the story affected by the change but not adjusted. A story develops from the beginning to end, and once written, any change at the beginning makes differences later in the piece, changes that are easy to miss. Thus cohesion and coherence become weak and faulty. Some "writers" think any major editing should be done by an editor. Let me share something I found in the August issue of The Writer. According to Sam McCarver, the author of six John Darnell mystery novels, "In the time-intensive world of publishing, you may have only one opportunity to intrigue an editor with your writing, your main character and your story. And you must often do than within pages - or the first few sentences - of your manuscript. "Editors are pressed for time and very perceptive in identifying good writing, interesting characters and gripping stories, so they move fast through your pages." McCarver goes on to say that an author must write the best story or novel possible: edit it, polish it, enhance it. Then he should read and make final changes - all before ever allowing anyone else to read it. Yes, before allowing anyone else to read an manuscript, the author should have spent hours improving a rough draft. Writing a story or novel is only half the job: Revising is the other half, a most important half, of writing. Ernest Hemingway, E.B. White, F. Scott Fitzgerald all admitted the need to revise and rewrite. Hemingway admitted he cut as he wrote, yet, he would take weeks to revise a book. McCarver's article "How to revise your FICTION" gives eight steps for editing a person's work. I happen to agree with his points, especially the one which states that delaying all editing until the manuscript is finished is a mistake. However, let's examine this author's ideas, as well as those expounded in many composition text books and believed by me: 1. Accept revising as the other half of writing. E.B. White stated that the best writing is rewriting. 2. Adopt good editing procedures. To produce a better first draft, one should begin revising with the first word written, making improvements as he goes. As a writer completes a day's production, he should study what's on the screen, if using a computer. If he sees a need for any changes, he should make them while they are fresh in his mind.. Then he should print what is finished. According to Chang-rae Lee, winner of the Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award, he tries to polish as he goes because what leads him to the next sentence is the sentence before. "I find that it's hard to move on unless I've really understood what's happening, what comes before and where it's heading." 3. Review printed pages. Writers should print out the pages finished and set them aside to "cool." Then they should read the printout with a pen in hand, noting corrections or revisions that will improve the writing. After making changes on the computer, writers should reprint the pages, adding to the pile of finished pages. Each day's, or period's, work should be the same: writing, rereading, editing, and making changes as one goes. 4. Identify errors and correct them. According to McCarver, three procedures are critical in the revision process: correcting mistakes, improving content, and enhancing the story. The first attention needs to go to spelling and punctuation errors, typos, grammatical mistakes, and inconsistencies in tense or point of view. Although such mistakes may seem minor to the author, editors expect manuscripts to be virtually free of any errors. A writer needs to present the best first impression possible with his or her material. 5. Improve content. "What you say and how you say it also must be polished to the best of your ability," states McCarver. "Improving content also includes considering the structure and sharpening your word choice," as well as re-examining characters for consistency, making sure the plot hangs together, that scenes are compelling and dialogue natural, and that all loose ends are tied up. Nothing in a writer's manuscript should appear "sloppy" or half-way thrown together. Word choice is a topic that would create a full article in itself, but it is a vital part of good writing. 6. Concentrate on enhancement. Enhancement goes beyond making corrections and improving content and style: It means increasing the quality and impact of the writing. A few techniques given by McCarver are as follows: * Inserting foreshadowing for greater event impact later. 7. Do that final revision. After finishing the whole manuscript, revise again. 8. Take one last look. After revising the complete manuscript again, the author should reread the printed pages before mailing them or sending a query letter. All errors and last minute changes should be made. All authors want to impress editors Always Review A Hosting Companies Terms Of Service within pages - or the first few sentences - of your manuscript.Before you sign up with any web host you need to take a very close look at the TOS; this is short for “Terms of service”. The TOS should not be overlooked, a lot of hosting customers simply check the “I agree” box and continue without even reading the terms, and this can cause a lot of headaches in the long run.TOS aren’t your typical user agreement that you will see when installing software applications. Hosting TOS contain very important information about what you can, and can’t do with your new web hosting account.Some hosts may have a really good deal, great price, great disk space and bandwidth but if you look closely at the TOS you may find little get out clauses such as:"Any customer using more than x% of system resources will have their hos "Editors are pressed for time and very perceptive in identifying good writing, interesting characters and gripping stories, so they move fast through your pages." McCarver goes on to say that an author must write the best story or novel possible: edit it, polish it, enhance it. Then he should read and make final changes - all before ever allowing anyone else to read it. Yes, before allowing anyone else to read an manuscript, the author should have spent hours improving a rough draft. Writing a story or novel is only half the job: Revising is the other half, a most important half, of writing. Ernest Hemingway, E.B. White, F. Scott Fitzgerald all admitted the need to revise and rewrite. Hemingway admitted he cut as he wrote, yet, he would take weeks to revise a book. McCarver's article "How to revise your FICTION" gives eight steps for editing a person's work. I happen to agree with his points, especially the one which states that delaying all editing until the manuscript is finished is a mistake. However, let's examine this author's ideas, as well as those expounded in many composition text books and believed by me: 1. Accept revising as the other half of writing. E.B. White stated that the best writing is rewriting. 2. Adopt good editing procedures. To produce a better first draft, one should begin revising with the first word written, making improvements as he goes. As a writer completes a day's production, he should study what's on the screen, if using a computer. If he sees a need for any changes, he should make them while they are fresh in his mind.. Then he should print what is finished. According to Chang-rae Lee, winner of the Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award, he tries to polish as he goes because what leads him to the next sentence is the sentence before. "I find that it's hard to move on unless I've really understood what's happening, what comes before and where it's heading." 3. Review printed pages. Writers should print out the pages finished and set them aside to "cool." Then they should read the printout with a pen in hand, noting corrections or revisions that will improve the writing. After making changes on the computer, writers should reprint the pages, adding to the pile of finished pages. Each day's, or period's, work should be the same: writing, rereading, editing, and making changes as one goes. 4. Identify errors and correct them. According to McCarver, three procedures are critical in the revision process: correcting mistakes, improving content, and enhancing the story. The first attention needs to go to spelling and punctuation errors, typos, grammatical mistakes, and inconsistencies in tense or point of view. Although such mistakes may seem minor to the author, editors expect manuscripts to be virtually free of any errors. A writer needs to present the best first impression possible with his or her material. 5. Improve content. "What you say and how you say it also must be polished to the best of your ability," states McCarver. "Improving content also includes considering the structure and sharpening your word choice," as well as re-examining characters for consistency, making sure the plot hangs together, that scenes are compelling and dialogue natural, and that all loose ends are tied up. Nothing in a writer's manuscript should appear "sloppy" or half-way thrown together. Word choice is a topic that would create a full article in itself, but it is a vital part of good writing. 6. Concentrate on enhancement. Enhancement goes beyond making corrections and improving content and style: It means increasing the quality and impact of the writing. A few techniques given by McCarver are as follows: * Inserting foreshadowing for greater event impact later. 7. Do that final revision. After finishing the whole manuscript, revise again. 8. Take one last look. After revising the complete manuscript again, the author should reread the printed pages before mailing them or sending a query letter. All errors and last minute changes should be made. All authors want to impress editors Let Youtube Help You Get Traffic! many composition text books and believed by me:If you are an avid Internet user, you are bound to have heard of the website ‘You Tube’. Now, You Tube is by far one of the fastest growing websites around today. Featuring thousands of Internet users in their own self-made videos, it is literally making hundreds people famous! Newspapers are picking up on various popular users and many have been featured in some of the most popular newspapers in the world.With that in mind, just think – how much traffic could you possibly get if you created your own videos? What better way to advertise your business or services than through a website that has millions of visitors each day? Internet marketing is by far one of the best ways to generate new business and what better way to do it than with a top class, highly popular s 1. Accept revising as the other half of writing. E.B. White stated that the best writing is rewriting. 2. Adopt good editing procedures. To produce a better first draft, one should begin revising with the first word written, making improvements as he goes. As a writer completes a day's production, he should study what's on the screen, if using a computer. If he sees a need for any changes, he should make them while they are fresh in his mind.. Then he should print what is finished. According to Chang-rae Lee, winner of the Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award, he tries to polish as he goes because what leads him to the next sentence is the sentence before. "I find that it's hard to move on unless I've really understood what's happening, what comes before and where it's heading." 3. Review printed pages. Writers should print out the pages finished and set them aside to "cool." Then they should read the printout with a pen in hand, noting corrections or revisions that will improve the writing. After making changes on the computer, writers should reprint the pages, adding to the pile of finished pages. Each day's, or period's, work should be the same: writing, rereading, editing, and making changes as one goes. 4. Identify errors and correct them. According to McCarver, three procedures are critical in the revision process: correcting mistakes, improving content, and enhancing the story. The first attention needs to go to spelling and punctuation errors, typos, grammatical mistakes, and inconsistencies in tense or point of view. Although such mistakes may seem minor to the author, editors expect manuscripts to be virtually free of any errors. A writer needs to present the best first impression possible with his or her material. 5. Improve content. "What you say and how you say it also must be polished to the best of your ability," states McCarver. "Improving content also includes considering the structure and sharpening your word choice," as well as re-examining characters for consistency, making sure the plot hangs together, that scenes are compelling and dialogue natural, and that all loose ends are tied up. Nothing in a writer's manuscript should appear "sloppy" or half-way thrown together. Word choice is a topic that would create a full article in itself, but it is a vital part of good writing. 6. Concentrate on enhancement. Enhancement goes beyond making corrections and improving content and style: It means increasing the quality and impact of the writing. A few techniques given by McCarver are as follows: * Inserting foreshadowing for greater event impact later. 7. Do that final revision. After finishing the whole manuscript, revise again. 8. Take one last look. After revising the complete manuscript again, the author should reread the printed pages before mailing them or sending a query letter. All errors and last minute changes should be made. All authors want to impress editors Making Spam Filter Your Buddy he pile of finished pages. Each day's, or period's, work should be the same: writing, rereading, editing, and making changes as one goes.The web keeps the business world revolving. Infinite possibilities are unfolded as online business comes to exist. Through the internet, marketing campaign, promotion, news reports and many more are made in just a matter of minutes. With this, transactions are made easy resulting to more sales. But this is not the real score nowadays, with people sending unsolicited emails (dubbed as spam), mail administrators and users tend to install spam filters in order to prevent annoying and offensive messages from reaching their inboxes. But the thing is, your legitimate message can be blocked.Spam filters are generally designed to eliminate spam messages in the inbox by either directing the received message on the bulk folder or deleting it. In other words, spam filters cl 4. Identify errors and correct them. According to McCarver, three procedures are critical in the revision process: correcting mistakes, improving content, and enhancing the story. The first attention needs to go to spelling and punctuation errors, typos, grammatical mistakes, and inconsistencies in tense or point of view. Although such mistakes may seem minor to the author, editors expect manuscripts to be virtually free of any errors. A writer needs to present the best first impression possible with his or her material. 5. Improve content. "What you say and how you say it also must be polished to the best of your ability," states McCarver. "Improving content also includes considering the structure and sharpening your word choice," as well as re-examining characters for consistency, making sure the plot hangs together, that scenes are compelling and dialogue natural, and that all loose ends are tied up. Nothing in a writer's manuscript should appear "sloppy" or half-way thrown together. Word choice is a topic that would create a full article in itself, but it is a vital part of good writing. 6. Concentrate on enhancement. Enhancement goes beyond making corrections and improving content and style: It means increasing the quality and impact of the writing. A few techniques given by McCarver are as follows: * Inserting foreshadowing for greater event impact later. 7. Do that final revision. After finishing the whole manuscript, revise again. 8. Take one last look. After revising the complete manuscript again, the author should reread the printed pages before mailing them or sending a query letter. All errors and last minute changes should be made. All authors want to impress editors PPC Advertising - Are You Using the Right Keywords? p>Word choice is a topic that would create a full article in itself, but it is a vital part of good writing.A few years ago, a friend and I decided to start an Internet Oldies Radio Station. After doing all the things necessary to get our station up and running, we were ready to broadcast to the 'world'. We quickly discovered however that there were already hundreds of Oldies stations online, and it was going to take some time to get our site established and recognized by the major search engines. Wanting to get some momentum going, we decided to come up with some ways to get some instant traffic to our site. One of the ways in which we decided to accomplish this was by using PPC(Pay Per Click) advertising. It was my task to come up with the 'keywords' that would drive traffic to our site. After spending some time compiling a list, I then proceeded to market our site through se 6. Concentrate on enhancement. Enhancement goes beyond making corrections and improving content and style: It means increasing the quality and impact of the writing. A few techniques given by McCarver are as follows: * Inserting foreshadowing for greater event impact later. 7. Do that final revision. After finishing the whole manuscript, revise again. 8. Take one last look. After revising the complete manuscript again, the author should reread the printed pages before mailing them or sending a query letter. All errors and last minute changes should be made. All authors want to impress editors by providing a story that the editors cannot put down. Each author, through a manuscript, has only one chance to make a great first impression. Note: "How to revise your FICTION" by Sam McCarver in The Writer, August, 2005, provided research material for this editorial as did several composition text books and notes and lesson plans of Vivian Gilbert Zabel.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Harnessing the Power of Directory Submission Deal With Debt Collectors Head On Have You Heard of the New 5/1 Interest Only ARMs with Option ARM Features?
|