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How to Be a More Concise Writer

May 21, 2014 By Erin Beasley

Work: speed or quality?

Concise writing doesn’t necessarily have to do with too many filler words although that is a component. Concise writing is strong writing. Concise writing demands strong verbs and concrete images. It refuses abstractions. It cuts away the dross of adjectives and adverbs.

Strong Verbs

A professor once described verbs as poetry in motion. That’s what strong verbs are and do: they convey emotion and create a sense of place and atmosphere. For example, a couple that bickers about what wine to have with their dinner is completely different from the couple that throws their napkins on the table and strides out of the restaurant.

Strong verbs mean losing the adverbs. A writer could say that the couple strode angrily from the restaurant. Sufficient? Perhaps, but something is lost when the situation isn’t built toward that moment. The reader should be able to see the “strode” in her mind. She shouldn’t have to wonder if that’s the way the two people normally walk or if it’s the result of whatever fight occurred only moments before.

Concrete Images

Concrete images are concrete nouns. They don’t rely upon adjectives; they stand on their own, like the ruined statue of Ozymandias standing in the desert. Concrete images avoid the abstractions of love and joy and show them in action. What does love look like, taste like, feel like?

Using strong verbs and concrete images doesn’t mean all adjectives and adverbs have to be cut; far from it. Adjectives and adverbs have their places within strong writing, and they can be used to affect a certain style of writing or speech. It’s simply that concise writing demands more attention be given to writing with strong verbs and concrete images and requests that writers stop asking adjectives and adverbs to do all the work.

Image: Frederic Guillory (Creative Commons)

Filed Under: Write Right Tagged With: adjectives, adverbs, concise writing, concrete images, nouns, verbs

Do Good Work

May 20, 2014 By Erin Beasley

Do Good Work

Observe people who are good at their work –
skilled workers are always in demand and admired;
they don’t take a backseat to anyone.
Proverbs 22:29 (The Message)

[Read more…] about Do Good Work

Filed Under: Work Life Tagged With: good work, Proverbs

Quality Work Takes Time

May 15, 2014 By Erin Beasley

Quality work takes time.

Nobody – not even the prodigies – awakes one morning and finds that they’re capable of doing quality work. The prodigies may have a head start with talent, but every one – every one – has to put in time and effort. They have to do the work, and they have to do it with love, attention, and consistency.

[Read more…] about Quality Work Takes Time

Filed Under: Writing Life Tagged With: inspiration, Ira Glass, quality, time, work

10 Filler Words to Cut from Your Writing

May 14, 2014 By Erin Beasley

Write Right Talks about Writing RightEveryone has filler words. One of mine is “just.” I’m conscious of it because it was brought to my attention during a poetry workshop several years ago. Before that, I didn’t even notice it. It was a “filler” in much the same way that everyone has their own version of a verbal pause. No one notices either the written or verbal pauses unless they’re noticed or corrected by another.

[Read more…] about 10 Filler Words to Cut from Your Writing

Filed Under: Write Right Tagged With: filler words, writing

Speed or Quality

May 13, 2014 By Erin Beasley

Glassblowing.

In a perfect world, quality work would preempt speedy work in every case. The world is not perfect. Therefore, speedy work often overrules quality work.

[Read more…] about Speed or Quality

Filed Under: Work Life Tagged With: haste, quality, speed

Fast, Cheap, or Good

May 8, 2014 By Erin Beasley

Fast, Cheap, or Good

According to tradition, you can have work that is fast and cheap, cheap and good, or fast and good. You cannot, however, have work that embodies all three traits. Something is necessarily lost in seeking one of the attributes.

[Read more…] about Fast, Cheap, or Good

Filed Under: Writing Life Tagged With: writing, writing quality

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