letswritesomenovels:Don’t say it was “delightful”; make us say “
letswritesomenovels: Don’t say it was “delightful”; make us say “delightful” when we’ve read the description. –C.S. Lewis I found this great piece of writing advice from C.S. Lewis on twitter today.(courtesy of @thatboycanteach) I know the phrase “show don’t tell” confuses a lot of people who are new to critiquing/workshops, because all writing is telling… isn’t it? But this is exactly what writers are talking about when they use that phrase. This is also why, when critiquing your work, writers might tell you to remove adjectives and adverbs, or why you might hear that those two types of words are “bad writing.” It’s not that you’re never allowed to use an adjective or an adverb, but that–like Lewis says–it’s much more preferable to be terrified, than to be told something is terrifying. Whenever you tell your reader what the characters in a story are experiencing, instead of letting your reader have an experience alongside your characters, you miss an opportunity to invite your reader into the story. If you miss too many, eventually your reader will stop waiting for their invitation and simply leave. -- source link
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