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Writing Essays

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Essays are a major form of assessment in higher education today and this is a fact that causes some writers a great deal of anxiety. Fortunately, essay writing is a skill that can be learned, like any other. Through precise explanations, this fully updated edition of Writing Essays gives you the confidence to express yourself coherently and effectively. It demystifies the entire process of essay writing, helping you to become proficient and confident in every aspect. Writing Essays reveals the tricks of the trade, making your student life easier. You’ll learn how to impress tutors by discovering exactly what markers look for when they read your work. Using practical examples selected from real student assignments and tutor feedback, this book covers every aspect of composition, from introductions and conclusions, down to presentation and submission. It also advises you on stress-free methods of revision, helps with exam essays, explains the principles of effective secondary source management, and shows you how to engage meaningfully with other critics’ views. A new chapter will also guide you through the intricacies of the undergraduate dissertation. As a full-time university professor, Richard Marggraf Turley counsels students and assesses their work every day, helping him to recognise the challenges that they face. Accessible, concise and full of practical examples, Writing Essays is a response to these challenges and will be an invaluable companion for Humanities students who wish to improve their grades and become confident in the art of essay writing.

158 pages, Paperback

First published November 7, 2000

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Richard Marggraf Turley

15 books6 followers

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5 stars
21 (34%)
4 stars
25 (40%)
3 stars
12 (19%)
2 stars
3 (4%)
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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
133 reviews5 followers
December 9, 2015
This book has been very helpful for me, especially as a newcomer to writing English essays. English essays are very different from philosophy essays and the section on critics was particularly invaluable. It works around physical examples (both good and bad) and this makes it easy to understand, in some cases you can even preempt the point Turley will make and you learn fancy phrases so you're able to say Turley's points concatenate. The book has a relaxed tongue-in-cheek attitude and I was able to read it cover to cover, highlighting as I went on my Kindle, in three hours.

If you are looking for advice on style, organisation and writing this is the book for you. Turley doesn't go into detail about researching and making notes, testing your ideas etc.

Very few sections are slightly outdated (the use of floppy-discs being the main one) but the section on computers in the first edition is still worth reading. As a note of caution, some new information is included in the 'Notes' box at the end of each chapter, so be sure to read them than skim then.

I'm glad I read it anyway and I hope it makes a positive difference to my MA essays.
2 reviews
May 30, 2015
I bought this book as a student, and I'm not exaggerating, it raised my grades by a whole class. What else is there to say - this study guide works.
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124 reviews2 followers
December 18, 2018
Helpful and funny. Not all information was relevant to modern days, but great book nonetheless.
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118 reviews6 followers
September 20, 2022
Extremely helpful and insightful book. Relevant guidance for a Masters student reflecting on undergrad dissertations and preparing for further thesis’s.
Appreciated the humour
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917 reviews75 followers
January 2, 2011
This was a requested or required text for my first term at University but at £18 for the book I refused to buy it and instead requested it from the Library, might I add it took me nearly a month and a half to get it as well!

Writing Essays, is a short book of only 140 pages. The book is broken down into 10 sections which makes reading easier as, if you want to read only one section it's easy to find and get what you need. However saying this the book overall is written in a fairly complex manor. The first chapter 'How To Write An Introduction' is rather complex and boring, I struggled to read the whole chapter and not skim read it. Yet I did enjoy reading chapter 2 'The Middle Section: Structure and Critics, chapter 5 'Grammer and Punctuation' and finally the last chapter 'How To Write Exam Essays.

Overall, I don't think the book was very informative and I when I finished it, I didn't feel as though I'd learned or gained anything from reading it I just felt annoyed and frustrated with the way the author had written the book and that fact it cost so much! Yet the 3 chapters I did like weren't overly helpful and detailed enough, nor were they explained in a coherent manor for all ages (by this I mean exam and essay ages) to understand.
75 reviews4 followers
May 3, 2010
This book is useful as a practical suggestion book for writing essays, especially at the undergraduate level. It is written in a very personable style, and it is easy to follow and understand. Chapter seven is outdated, and chapter nine is only useful if you are not following a specific style guide such as MLA. Again, a fast, useful read.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews