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What Is Your LEAST Favorite Technology?

...ven when we might benefit from that sacrifice. The sacrifice is not truly voluntary. (Have you ever actually read Google’s or Facebook’s “terms of use?” Yeah, me neither, and they know that we don’t.) And while they’ve provided ways to “control” some of that, who makes the time, or has the computer savvy, to find those controls? So what’s your least favorite bit of technology? The technology of the comment box stands ready to accept your answer, a...Read More

Critique Technique, Part 51 — Punctuation

...nding discussion on whether or not writers should use the Oxford or serial comma. This comma follows the next-to-last element in a list, falling just before the conjunction. I personally favor using the Oxford comma because there are cases where confusion can result if you don’t know whether the last two items in a list are separate or belong together. One of the very best examples of this is the title of Lynn Truss’s book on punctuation Eats, Sho...Read More

Give It Up, Part 1

...Definition picture? Who’d even heard of that 10 years ago? What about your computer? I mean all forms of them—laptop, desktop, tablet, phone—not just replacing a desktop with a laptop or tablet. No more e-mail, no more Facebook, no more blogs (Whoa! Wait a minute!), no more annoying banner ads, no more spam except the kind that comes in a can. Hmmm. That’s actually about 37 dozen technologies, though, so maybe it doesn’t count. Sure, this is an ar...Read More

Great Stuff for Writers, April 22, 2013

...tle, this one by Sophie Masson (@SophieMasson1). She provides only 4 tips, compared to Kris Montee’s 10, but they’re also good: titles can be simple but complex, poetic, or mysterious can work as well. Theme, atmosphere, setting, or characters can also provide the keys. Bottom line: keep your mind and mental ear open for that magic phrase. Giving your story a satisfactory ending is one of the surest ways to bring your reader back for more. So how...Read More

Critique Technique, Part 8: Story Endings

...ploads/2018/07/Critique-Technique-Part-8-Story-Endings.mp3 To quote from Ogden Nash’s puckish poetry accompanying Camille Saint-Saëns’ Carnival of the Animals, “Now we reach the grand finale / Animale Carnivale….” The story you’ve been reviewing has reached and passed its climax, its moment of greatest tension and conflict. The good guys have won… or not. The protagonist has survived, achieved whatever she set out to achieve (or maybe something di...Read More

Critique Technique, Part 5: Weak or Missing Hook

...hat work, or does not do it well. Photo by Marco Michelini, via FreeImages.com Edgerton says those first pages need to do four things: Introduce the protagonist and their normal world. Contain the “inciting incident” that throws the protagonist out of that normal world. Contain the “surface problem,” the problem they initially think they have to solve. Introduce the first hints of the “story-worthy problem,” which is what will drive the protagonis...Read More

Critique Technique Bonus Material — Read-Out-Loud Tools and Techniques

...y feel weird to hear your own voice this way, the more you do it, the more comfortable you’ll be with it, especially as you discover all the things you need to fix. High-tech: Have your computer read the work to you. Both Windows and macOS have text-to-speech software built in. For many years, Microsoft and Apple word processing programs have had a read-aloud function. Today, many apps based on either Windows or macOS can take advantage of the ope...Read More

“Creating Fiction” Review

...hapters of a long work. And in my experience, each class will insist on students starting at the beginning of a piece, even if the student writer is multiple chapters into their draft. Finally, because the book was written in the late 1990s, before the advent of Web 2.0, there’s no discussion of electronic publishing, doing research online, etc. The final essay, on submitting pieces for publication not only focuses (again) on literary magazines, i...Read More

Taking Nothing for Granite

...dly pulled one of each from their stock, and a good thing they did. The Golden Crystal had more gray than gold, but the Golden Ridge? Much better. And what gray there is will complement the gray in the slate floor tiles. We have a winnah! There’s one thing these pictures can’t show–and it’s my fault for taking them the way I did–and that’s how big these slabs are. Each one is about 5 feet tall by 7 or 8 feet wide. That’s A LOT of stone, and while...Read More

Critique Technique, Part 53 — Grammar Errors

...will turn up plenty. Local community colleges are another great resource. What a critiquer really needs is a practical working knowledge of the language. If you can’t name the differences between a subjunctive mood, a gerund, and a comma splice, that’s not such a big deal. As long as you can identify when a manuscript isn’t communicating effectively and what needs to be done to change it, you’re doing what you need to do. No Questions for You If y...Read More