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Six Things Readers Need: Respect

April 26, 2012 By Erin Beasley

Girl reading at the bus stop.I hated my childhood endocrinologist. I would get nervous about seeing him weeks in advance. The reason was simple: he made me feel small, worthless, and stupid. After waiting for hours and hours to see him, he would rush into the examination room, tell my mother and I what was wrong and what I was doing wrong, and leave. He never spoke with me; he didn’t even speak to me. He spoke over and around me.

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Filed Under: Writing Life Tagged With: diabetes, doctors, readers, respect, writers, writing

Six Things Readers Need: Facts

April 25, 2012 By Erin Beasley

Does this reader have all the facts he needs?I’ve been thinking about the CarFax commercials. A customer enters the used-car lot and begins to look at automobiles. A salesperson approaches and, in the stereotypical, sleazy manner, tries to woo or strong-arm the customer into purchasing a vehicle. The customer pauses; the CarFax fox appears; and the customer leaves because the salesperson refuses to show the customer the facts about the vehicle.

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Filed Under: Writing Life Tagged With: CarFax, facts, sleazy salesman, truth, writers

Six Things Readers Need: Predictability

April 24, 2012 By Erin Beasley

Predictability is a sort of road map.Most people enjoy having some sense of direction when they embark upon their reading. They want to know where the author might be leading them. They want to know what landmarks they can hope to view. They want some predictability.

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Filed Under: Writing Life Tagged With: Erika Napoletano, John Zorn, music, predictability, Redhead Writing, writing, writing style

Six Things Readers Need: Context

April 23, 2012 By Erin Beasley

A waterfront reading nook. I want one.When I read, I have to have some sort of context. I’m not content reading a smattering of quotations, although I might if that is the context of a particular article for a particular reason. In general, though, I need to know who said the quote, and I need to know the context for the quote. Without those two things, a quote can be made to say anything, and that’s dangerous. Movements – religious, political, et cetera – can be based on a quotation taken out of context.

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Filed Under: Writing Life Tagged With: audience, Blue Key Campaign, context

Why I Save the Duds

April 21, 2012 By Erin Beasley

A failed piece of writing? Oh no! Oh, yes.In a perfect world, every poem I write would be amazing and worthy of being published. The world is not perfect, and very few of my poems are amazing. In fact, for every one, good poem I write, I probably write between seven and ten duds.

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Filed Under: Perfectionism, Poetry, Writing Life Tagged With: failures, poems, writing

Six Things Readers Need

April 20, 2012 By Erin Beasley

Even the youngest reader deserves consideration.Most people can be self-centered, and writers are no exception. They become lost in their own words. They forget about their audience and the best way to reach it.

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Filed Under: Writing Life Tagged With: audience, laziness, self-centeredness

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