Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Mark Twain Rules for Writing


SOME RULES FOR WRITING by Mark Twain
(From the Atlantic Wire)















Mark Twain was a man with a lot of ideas going through his head. In 1895, one of them was how James Fenimoore Cooper violated 18 of the 19 "rules governing literary art in the doman of romantic fiction" in his novel The Deerslayer. Twain tries setting them all down on paper, and most of them are good tips if you're writing a piece of James Fenimoore Cooper fan fiction, but will probably be of limited help to other writers. Starting at point 12, the "rules" blend into general literary rules of the road.
·       Say what he is proposing to say, not merely come near it.
·       Use the right word, not its second cousin.
·       Eschew surplusage.
o   Not omit necessary details.
o   Avoid slovenliness (lazy or sloppiness) of form.
o   Use good grammar.
o   Employ a simple and straightforward style


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