Writers Tips #84: 20 Hints that Mark the Novice Writer

When you read your story, does it sound off, maybe you can’t quite put your finger on it, but you know you’ve done something wrong? Sometimes–maybe even lots of times–there are simple fixes. These writer’s tips will come at you once a week, giving you plenty of time to go through your story and make the adjustments.


If you believe in formulaic writing, there is no better self-help writer’s manual than Evan Marshall’s The Marshall Plan for Novel Writing (Writers House Books 1998). Not only does Marshall lay out the exact steps required to produce a publishable novel, he includes a wonderfully pithy section called “How to be your own Editor”.


Mine is dog-eared, highlighted and pretty much unreadable from the dozens of times I’ve scoured it during the editing process of my three novels. I can’t list all the hints he shares, but I’ll give you some. For more, you’ll have to buy the book:




Make sure time tracks correctly in your story
Make sure the character’s goals are clear in your writing
Make sure character behave logically in light of what has already happened to them and in light of what they know
Use adverbs sparingly. If you decide to use one, use only one
Write in the language that comes naturally to your POV character, be that formal, casual, slanged
In almost all cases, you can strengthen a sentence by removing very writing
Be specific. It’s not just a dog–it’s a toy poodle or a white Labrador
Use similes and metaphor that would occur to the POV character
Use the five senses
Give description in action, not narrative
Treat walk-on characters as furniture
Write in the positive. Tell what is, not what isn’t
Delete redundancies like past history, tall skyscrapers
Get rid of qualifiers like a bit, a little, fairly
Watch for circumlocution
Watch for autonomous body parts like His lips curved into a smile
Get rid of began to, started
Don’t tell reader something twice
Don’t use mitigators like appeared to, seemed to
Limit was, is, were

I wanted to share other opinions about the Marshall Plan–it comes as a guidebook (which is the book I purchased), a workbook (bought that too but didn’t use it), and fairly pricey software–but the only 2014 (or 2013) review I found was Luc Reid‘s. If you love the book like I do and are considering the software, you might pop by his well-balanced informative post.


More on writing tips for the novice:


Writers Tip #56: Don’t Repeat Yourself


13 Tips from Bob Mayer’s Novel Writer’s Toolkit


17 Tips From Noah Lukeman


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Jacqui Murray is the author of the popular Building a Midshipman, the story of her daughter’s journey from high school to United States Naval Academy. She is the author/editor of dozens of books on integrating tech into education, webmaster for six blogs, an Amazon Vine Voice book reviewer, a columnist for Examiner.com and TeachHUB, Editorial Review Board member for Journal for Computing Teachers, monthly contributor to Today’s Author and a freelance journalist on tech ed topics. 

 


Filed under: editing, writers tips Tagged: novice writer, writers tips
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Published on October 13, 2014 00:18
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