The book you need to read to write the book you want to write : a handbook for fiction writers / Sarah Burton and Jem Poster.
Material type:
- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781009073738
- 1009073737
- 808.3
- PN 3355 B974b 2022
Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Humanidades | Humanidades (4to. Piso) | PN 3355 B974b 2022 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 00000178420 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. Getting started
2. Memory and imagination
3. Character
Introducing characters
Character and plot
Characters are individuals
Character and narrative voice
How many characters?
Minor characters
Character isn't fixed
Planning characters
4. Plot and structure I
Getting to grips with plot
Telling it slant
5. Plot and structure II
The patterns of plot
Hiding plot: putting doors in alleyways
Narrative time
6. Form and length
Definitions
Novels
Short stories
Flash fiction
7. Dialogue
Dialogue matters
Carrying information in dialogue
Capturing character in dialogue
Writing between the lines
Attributing dialogue
Punctuating dialogue conventionally
Alternative ways of punctuating dialogue
Accent and dialect
Other worlds, other times
How do we show a character's thoughts?
8. Narrative viewpoint and narrative voice
Where do we stand?
Author and narrator: knowing and telling
First- and third-person narratives: the basics
How perspective changes the story
Multiple-viewpoint narratives
The range of perspectives
Centres of consciousness in the third-person narrative
Character and state of mind as revealed in first-person voices
The unreliable narrator
First-person plural narration
Second-person address
Other-world narrative voices
9. Beginnings and endings: tension and pace
A good enough beginning
Exposition and starting in medias res
A sense of an ending
Tension and pace
10. Description
The purpose of description
Preconceptions about style - Clichés
Metaphors and similes
Modifiers
Describing place
How much detail?
Showing through description
11. Research
Keeping research unobtrusive
Subjects
Sources
Serving your story
12. Drawing it all together
An approach to editing
Editing techniques
Getting value from a critical reader
Editing in response to notes
Accepting imperfection
13. Publication and the writing life
Publishing short stories
Agents and editors
Targeting and pitching
Understanding rejection
Interpreting rejection
It's just an opinion
Hold your nerve
The writing life
Writer's block
Set achievable goals
Stick at it
Feed the compost heap
The pleasures of writing
"This is an indispensable handbook for anyone who wants to deepen their understanding of the process of writing a novel or short story. Rather than prescribing restrictive templates or formulae, Sarah Burton and Jem Poster draw on their extensive experience as both successful writers and expert teachers to open up exciting possibilities. Intelligent and jargon-free, their guide thoughtfully navigates some of the most important and challenging aspects of creating fiction, such as the interplay of memory and imagination, the plotting of stories, the creation of convincing characters, the uses of description, and the pleasures and pitfalls of research. A storehouse of ideas and practical advice, from boosting self- motivation, to editing, to ultimately approaching agents and publishers, it will inspire confidence in developing authors. The book's primary aim is simple: to help its readers to become better writers"-- Provided by publisher.
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