Let the Crazy Child Write!: Finding Your Creative Writing VoiceNew World Library, 8 февр. 2011 г. - Всего страниц: 288 Twelve lively, in-depth chapters reveal how following our untrained impulses — our creative unconscious or "Crazy Child" — gives an authentic grasp on writing stories, poems, plays, and essays. Let the Crazy Child Write! introduces exercises that explicitly tap this knowledge and also presents guidelines on how to give, and receive, constructive feedback. This is the first how-to-write text to give full credit to the creative unconscious since Becoming a Writer, the 1934 classic by Dorothea Brande. Matson goes further by developing writing techniques step by step: Image Detail, Slow Motion, Hook, Persona Writing, Point of View, Dialogue, Plot, Narrative Presence, Good Clichés, Character, Surrealism, and Resolution. |
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Стр. 1
... scene from one detail . The details that catch your attention in life are the same ones that catch your attention as a reader , and the same ones that work for you as a writer . Much of the adventure of writing is discover- ing which ...
... scene from one detail . The details that catch your attention in life are the same ones that catch your attention as a reader , and the same ones that work for you as a writer . Much of the adventure of writing is discover- ing which ...
Стр. 2
... scene over and over in your mind, getting to know it well, before you find the appropriate detail. Either way is fine. Whether you write slowly or rapidly is sim- ply a signal of how your Crazy Child works. It's the part of you that ...
... scene over and over in your mind, getting to know it well, before you find the appropriate detail. Either way is fine. Whether you write slowly or rapidly is sim- ply a signal of how your Crazy Child works. It's the part of you that ...
Стр. 3
... scene as the words are read. This picture-making might sound rare or exotic, but it is nei- ther. Picture-making is automatic in every human being. It is the job of the human imagination to make images. By “imagination” I mean more than ...
... scene as the words are read. This picture-making might sound rare or exotic, but it is nei- ther. Picture-making is automatic in every human being. It is the job of the human imagination to make images. By “imagination” I mean more than ...
Стр. 4
... scene. We move the bed, with the child, in terror or in a nightly numbness. We imagine the bullets angling through the window, we hear the thudding sound and see the shards of glass — our nervous system makes sure we do this. We see the ...
... scene. We move the bed, with the child, in terror or in a nightly numbness. We imagine the bullets angling through the window, we hear the thudding sound and see the shards of glass — our nervous system makes sure we do this. We see the ...
Стр. 8
... scenes . Her details have this effect because they are small , odd , and dissonant . Imaginary Image Detail Image details ... scene so deeply that the details come alive , and then she must write them down . Or she could have gone to a ...
... scenes . Her details have this effect because they are small , odd , and dissonant . Imaginary Image Detail Image details ... scene so deeply that the details come alive , and then she must write them down . Or she could have gone to a ...
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Let the Crazy Child Write: Finding Your Creative Writing Voice Clive Matson Ограниченный просмотр - 1998 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
action attention Barbara Kingsolver becomes begin body camera-on-the-shoulder chapter character's choose clichés Copyright Crazy Child Write creative unconscious dark door dream Editor and Writer ERICA JONG essay EUDORA WELTY event Excerpt excitement eyes feedback feel Georgia O'Keeffe give goal happen hear hook image detail imagine issue keep Let the Crazy let your Crazy listen look Marge Piercy Mary Oliver Michael McClure mind narrative presence narrator nervous system notice novel paragraph Perhaps person phrase pick piece play poem poet point of view powerful practice present remember Reprinted by permission resolution rewrite Robert Bly saber-toothed tiger Sam Shepard scene sense sentence slow motion writing someone speech story surreal syngenetic workshop T.S. Eliot talking tell Tennessee Williams thing third-person point thought three-legged dog undercurrent velociraptor vivid voice Weston WILLIAM DEMENT woman words