Our editing tips over the next few months are part of a series called Dial up Your Dialogue, by Writing Your Life editor Teresa Bruce. Be sure to follow along each month for Teresa's fantastic tips to energize your dialogue.
Dial up Your Dialogue, Part One
As you write and revise your work—whether you’re telling your ancestors’ stories, recalling personal anecdotes, or trying your hand at fiction—keep this in mind:
Dial up Your Dialogue, Part One
As you write and revise your work—whether you’re telling your ancestors’ stories, recalling personal anecdotes, or trying your hand at fiction—keep this in mind:
Mitchell's book,
Last week’s newsletter featured a writing prompt that explored the foods of our Fourth of July traditions. Food really is a magnet that draws up our memories from the deep beyond. Author Rick Bragg released a new book earlier this year that gloriously weaves together story and food.
The Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author of the bestsellers All Over But the Shoutin', Ava's Man, and The Prince of Frogtown shares
work. The challenge featured daily writing prompts, including one special day of sprints, writing on a one-word topic for one minute, for a total of five words in five minutes. Whew!
Here are comments from some of the challenge participants:
day—in doctors’ waiting rooms, at red lights, while she eats, in her sleep—then skip this section. If you’re like me, and most other authors I know, writing has to be deliberate; it doesn’t happen without a little encouragement from the outside.
Remember when grade-school teachers insisted you include three to five complete sentences in every paragraph? That formula worked well for crafting elementary essays, but you’ll benefit from sometimes tossing aside that guideline in current projects. Variety adds spice not only to life but also to your writing rhythm.
Shorter paragraphs make points with a punch.
Longer paragraphs, on the other hand,