Word Sharpeners
How to Write a Novel: The Snowflake Method
Writing the Perfect Scene
Planning an Article
How to Write Articles That Generate Traffic
Know the Lingo
Characters - Give Em Some Attitude
Theme and Premise...What is the Difference?
Point of View in Fiction - What's Right and What's Wrong?"
Article Writing Tips - Tying It All Together
Hate Writing Articles? What to Do When Your Muse Deserts You
Article Writing Tips - A Never Before Revealed Guide on How to Write an Article
Avoiding Plagiarism Through Copyscape
How to Start a Local Online Article Author Club
7 Exciting Things You Get to do When You Write a Book
Increase Web Traffic with Article Collections
How to Choose a Good Topic for an Article
Flashbacks - How to Use This Clever Technique
Writing Romance 101 - How to Create a Dynamic Couple
8 Key Ways to Press Release Writing
A Beginning Writer's Outlook
...Bring Life to Your Articles
3 Simple Steps to Writing Great Articles
Don't Give Your Rights Away
How to Make Money Writing Product Reviews
How to Write a Relevant and Compelling eBook
The Art of Blogging and How to Use It As a Self Publishing Author
Creating Conflict
Writing Articles to Promote Your Website and Where to Submit Them
10 Easy Steps for Writing 750 Word Articles in Under an Hour
Many One Way Links To Help Your Website
Fantasy Writing and Altered Consciousness
Active Verbs VS Passive Verbs In Fiction
Gerund Verbs - How They Hurt or Help Your Fiction
Writing and Self Publishing for Profit
Vital Verbs
Finding the Perfect Monster for Your Horror Story
Writing Without Style
Dialogue Tags - A Study in Common Error
Let Tom Swift Inform Your Writing
Ever heard of Tom Swifties?
Maybe you're too young to be familiar with the classic Tom Swift adventures for boys. Or maybe you're a girl who never read a Tom Swift book nor cares to.
Tom Swifties are one-line jokes lampooning the style of Victor Appleton, the author of the original Tom Swift books. People started making jokes about his overuse of adverbs and the unnecessary taglines he wrote into his dialogue. Like the Polish jokes, they were so much fun that that a whole series of them became available for the pun-loving. The author of these classics, of course, laughed all the way to the bank. But that's a lesson for one of my marketing seminars, not this article on writing.
Tom Swifties were then. This is now. I haven't dared to go to the new books in the series but I assume that this outdated writing has been eliminated from them.
You'll want to minimize tags and adverbs in your writing, too!
An example from one of the Swift books will suffice to let you know what to watch for. (Thank you to Roy Peter Clark for the example.)
"'Look!'suddenly exclaimed Ned. 'There's the agent now!...I'm going to speak to him!' impulsively declared Ned.'"
Even authors who swear that adverbs are always very, very good things to use and are reluctant to give up their clever taglines can see how, well . . . .awful this is. In fact, I have to reassure people the quotation is real! Some of the writing that comes to the desks of agents and editors looks almost as bad. Here's how you can make sure yours doesn't:
1. Use taglines only when one is necessary for the reader to know who is speaking.
2. Almost always choose "he said" or "she said" over anything too cute, exuberant or wordy like "declared" and "exclaimed."
3. Cut the "ly" words ruthlessly, not only in dialogue tags but everywhere. You will find specific techniques for strengthening your writing in the process of eliminating adverbs in The Frugal Editor: Put Your Best Book Forward to Avoid Humiliation and Ensure Success. This book will also give you some computer tricks for making these edits easy.
The Frugal Editor will be released October 1, 2007 and is available for pre-order on Amazon.com now. Until you get the book, you don't have to know the reasons or the techniques for making the "ly" and tagline edits easy. As Nike is fond of saying, "Just do it!"
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Carolyn Howard-Johnson, award-winning author of The Frugal Book Promoter: How to Do What Your Publisher Won't and The Frugal Editor: Put Your Best Book Forward to Avoid Humiliation and Ensure Success. Both books are winners of USA Book News "Best Professional Book" award the first in the HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers holds Book Publicists of Southern California's coveted Irwin Award. She is also the author of The Great First Impression Book Proposal: Everything You Need To Know To Sell Your Book in 20 Minutes or Less, one of Amazon's famous 49 cent Shorts. Learn more at www.HowToDoItFrugally.com.