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โ๏ธ Elevate your words, join the writing elite!
Writing Tools: 50 Essential Strategies for Every Writer is the celebrated 10th anniversary edition of Roy Peter Clarkโs bestselling guide, featuring 50 concise essays and 5 exclusive bonus tools. Drawing on 30 years of journalism and teaching experience, this book offers practical, inspiring advice for writers at all levels, backed by over 200 real-world examples. With a 4.7-star rating from over 1,400 readers, itโs a must-have resource to refine your craft and transform your writing habits.







| Best Sellers Rank | #73,724 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #37 in Rhetoric #53 in Writing Skill Reference #58 in Book Publishing |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 1,435 Reviews |
S**N
noted
I am half way through the book and learning that which I do not know.
L**T
Both practical and enjoyable.
โPractice doesnโt make perfect โ it makes permanent.โ I forget who wrote that, but itโs a good reminder that you can practice something without really improving. Writing Tools has inspired me to seek out and disassemble my poorly built writing habits, and to remake them with better materials. One of my favourite tools from the book is what Roy Peter Clark refers to as the Ladder of Abstraction. At the bottom of the ladder we find concrete language: tables and chairs, hard packed snow, and slippery salamanders. At the top of the ladder we find abstract language: divine beauty, manic depression, and heartfelt apologies. To keep the reader reading, avoid spending too much time in one spot on the ladder. Move up and down it, and avoid the middle where murky obscure language will confuse the reader and cause them to lose interest. Writing has turned out to be a bigger challenge than I expected when I first sat down to write my book; a challenge thatโs turning out to be a very fun journey of learning. I will keep Writing Tools close for future reference. Highly recommend.
J**D
How Reading and Writing Work
Roy Peter Clark lays out 50 of his writing tools and invites us to borrow them for our own writing toolboxes. Each writing tool is presented in a brief chapter that explains the strategy, offers examples, and ends with practice exercises. Clark reminds us that these are tools, not rules. We should work with a few of them at a time to improve our written work and our writing process. The 50 tools are grouped into four sections. In "Nuts and Bolts," Clark covers writing basics. There are no tedious specifications for comma placement or hyphenation. Instead there are effective techniques for using language "at the word, sentence and paragraph levels." These ten tools include "Establish a pattern, then give it a twist," which shows how repetition can set the reader's expectations. And how occasionally breaking the pattern highlights information and maintains interest. Another chapter, "Cut big, then small" discusses the painful task of revising by removing. Snip and cry, but snip. "Part Two: Special Effects" demonstrates techniques of "economy, clarity, originality, and persuasion." The thirteen tips in this section include "Set the pace with sentence length" which shows how to influence the psychological "speed" at which a reader moves through text. "Get the name of the dog" emphasizes collecting concrete details as we do research. They allow us to move down the ladder of abstraction and bring life to descriptive writing. In Part Three: Blueprints," Clark advocates organizing our writing process as well as our documents. Two of the best tools among these sixteen show how to encourage--and manage --readers' progress. "To generate suspense, use internal cliffhangers" and whet the reading appetite with not-yet-complete information. "Place gold coins along the path" reminds to provide points of enjoyment and closure to satisfy readers. And reduce the tension created by all of those cliffhangers. "Part Four: Useful Habits" closes the book with eleven long-term strategies for working writers. "Limit self-criticism in early drafts--then turn it loose during revision" balances creativity and critique. It is consistent with the two-part writing process described at length in Peter Elbow's Writing With Power . "Recruit your own support group" goes beyond standard advice about seeking feedback. Clark encourages writers to understand their own writing blind spots and needs for others' expertise. Then target helpers with matching knowledge and skills. It does not surprise when a book from an experienced writer is well-written and entertaining--as this one is. It should not surprise that the advice is useful and can improve our writing if we follow it. This is a very good book and is highly recommended. It deserves a place on your bookshelf next to Strunk and White's The Elements of Style , William Zinsser's On Writing Well , Susan Bell's The Artful Edit , and Mark Kramer and Wendy Call's Telling True Stories . Feed your shelf.
H**S
I love this!
This is written with any writer in mind. It is not dictating what you have to do in order to write successfully, but it suggests ways of exploring wwords, phrases and your writing as a whole. It encourages you to think about the smallest thing not just the bigger picture because within that bigger picture are so many wonderful words and tools you can use to heighten the experience for the reader. He provides so many examples from literature and even little excercises to try out so you can see the 'tool' in action. I highly recommend this to any writer who is doubting their work. You'll realise that a lot of these you do automatically and that will give you a boost. It will also make you think about things you never have before and once you've read that 'tool' you'll start noticing examples of it when you're reading and writing yourself. And it gives you greater clarity to understand your own writing as well as that of others. It was recommended to me and I recommend it to you. See what tools can help you improve your writing and your confidence to know you are on the right lines. Awesome book!
F**A
48 strumenti essenziali nella cassetta degli attrezzi
Strumenti, non regole. Clark crede che tutti possano scrivere bene con i giusti strumenti e li racconta in questo libro. Essenziale per scrittori e per giornalisti.
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