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Tuesday, September 13, 2011
Movement is not action
Never confuse movement with action.
Ernest Hemingway
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Got Editing Questions?
If you have an editing question you'd like us to address, feel free to send it to
rasley at gmail dot com
. We like reader questions because they save us from having to think up post topics on our own. ;)
Readers' Choice for Top Ten Blog Posts
1. Top Ten Reasons the Editor Doesn't Love What Your Critique Group Loves
2. How to Put It Together Into One Neat Tweet
3. Marks of the Amateur - Starting a List
4. When Unnamed Characters Speak
5. Character-Driven/Plot-Driven
6. The Words Not Spoken, the Steps Not Taken
7. This Was in the Comments, But It's a Great Question, So Let's Discuss--
8. Dialogue Tags
9. Enjambment in Fiction
10. Thoughts on Pacing - Nothing Brilliant
Readers' Choice for Best Series by Alicia
Line Editing
Readers' Choice for Best Series by Theresa
Johnny and Drago
Readers' Choice for Best Series by Both Editors
There They Go, Again With the Damned Participle Rants
Theresa's Dubious Honor
Useful Sites for Writers
Alicia's Writer's Corner
Brian's Common Errors Site
Internet-Resources (Killer Collection of Links for Writers)
Merriam Webster Online
Poets & Writers Online
Purdue's OWL Grammar Handouts
Schoolhouse Rock Grammar Rock Lyrics
The Chicago Manual of Style online
Theresa Stevens, Editor
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Pathetic Fallacy
Brought to You by the Letters R and U
Great Analogies
Creating something from nothing
Defining a Few Terms
I love flash mobs in train stations....
New Malady-- writers who don't read
Reselling Digital Products
Movement is not action
Engagement Marketing Video
End of line
Why Direct Publishing Will Prevail
Guest Blog: Jenny Brown. Second Book Syndrome
Are You a Triple-X Brand?
The case for saying the same thing twice, thrice, ...
Wanted to foreground this so Adrian would see and ...
Another in a series of really picky line editing e...
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When Theresa's not reading manuscripts, she's reading:
"Nightwood" by Djuna Barnes. From now on, anytime I hear someone attack romance for being florid, I'm waving this "classic" at them. Overwriting ahoy!
"What Happens in London" by Julia Quinn. Excellent use of fairy tale structure.
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