A writer-editor-teacher’s quote of the week #41

Writing about her experiences judging a major fiction contest, Diana Wagman had this to tell us about the book that won:


“But the writing is elegant and deceptively simple. The characters are complex and their problems are very modern, set against an old-fashioned world that is believably portrayed. There are beautiful, poetic descriptions and gritty, terse paragraphs. [ . . .] In the end it was about voice. It was about distinction— a story that could only be told in that way, with that character, in that combination of style and craft.”


– from “Confessions of a Literary Judge” by Diana Wagman, published in Poets & Writers, November/December 2003


Filed under: Literature, Reading, Teaching, Writing and Editing
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Published on November 16, 2014 12:30
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