Steering the Craft: Exercises and Discussions on Story Writing for the Lone Navigator Or the Mutinous CrewOne of the great writers of the twentieth century offers an exhilarating workout for writers of narrative fiction or nonfiction. With her sharp mind and wit and a delightful sense of playfulness, Le Guin has turned a successful workshop into a self-guided voyage of discovery for a writer working alone, a writing group, or a class. Steering the Craft is concerned with the basic elements of narrative: how a story is told, what moves it and what clogs it. This book does not plod through plot, character, beginning-middle-and-end. Nor does it discuss writing as self-expression, as therapy, or as spiritual adventure. Each topic includes examples that clarify and exercises that intensify awareness of the techniques of storytelling. |
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Contents
Table of Examples | vii |
THE SOUND OF YOUR WRITING | 19 |
THREE | 39 |
Copyright | |
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adjectives adverbs Asado beauty change PRESENT PERFECT changed Active Voice changed PAST PERFECT changed PAST TENSE clause critiquing crowd Dedlock detached author device discussion examples EXERCISE NINE eyes feel Floyd focus frog FUTURE PERFECT TENSE grammar happen he/she/it hear involved author J.R.R. Tolkien Jacob's Room Jane Jane Eyre kind language limited third person listen Lone Navigator long sentence look mean memoir Mood PRESENT TENSE narration narrative prose narrative sentence narrative tense never Northern Paiute Language novel Observer-Narrator omniscient onomatopoeia PARTICIPLE passage Passive Voice PAST PERFECT TENSE peer groups plot point of view Potential Mood PRESENT PERFECT TENSE Princess Sefrid punctuation reader repetition rhythm scene shift short sound story storytelling Subjunctive sweet sweet sweet tell there's thing think or talk thought tion told Uncle Tom's Cabin Ursula K verb Version viewpoint character Virginia Woolf what's words workshop written