``Ace, watch your head!'' hissed Wanda urgently, yet somehow provocatively, through red, full, sensuous lips, but he couldn't, you know, since nobody can actually watch more than part of his nose or a little cheek or lips if he really tries, but he appreciated her warning.'' From Janice Estey, Aspen, Colo.
"I'm sorry," he apologized.
She placed the coffee cup that she was holding on top of the table that was sitting beside her bed.
She placed the coffee cup she was holding on the table sitting beside her bed.
She placed the coffee cup on the table beside her bed.
Hats wrote:"Frodo! Cast off your [s]sins[/s] into the fire!"
Lynna wrote:I often search for new, interesting words to use
FllMtl Novelist (post: 1411684) wrote:Read The Elements of Style by Strunk and White. You will see the light. XD
Lynna (post: 1411682) wrote:Instead of avoiding the word "said" constantly, I find it easier to have a miny description as to how they said it, or what they were doing while they said it. It's kind of hard not to go overboard on it sometimes, but it does work a lot of the time.
Any more advice is welcome ^_^
Lynna wrote:I don't understand why it's so wrong to describe a character.
the_wolfs_howl (post: 1413329) wrote:Oh, and as for character descriptions, I've found that it often works best to scatter the details about the character throughout the story, rather than info-dumping them all at the beginning or wherever. That way the reader can become acquainted with the character's personality and mannerisms at the same time as their physical appearance.
Kaori (post: 1411702) wrote:
...As for the quantity of description--some people like description more than others, so I think the question of how much is too much is highly subjective. A general rule of thumb is that description should serve some purpose, like what Nate said. Only, I wouldn't go so far as to say that you should never describe anything that doesn't directly tie into the plot. If you take that idea too far, you would end up with your characters wandering around in some vague, undescribed location, and your readers won't be able to picture the setting in which the action is taking place (like Spenser's Faerie Queene, but Spenser can get away with it). The reader does need to have some sense of setting, especially if it's a created world, not present-day wherever-you-live.
...
Here's another frequently-repeated truism:
If you want to write well, read good books.
The more you read, and the more broadly you read, and the more you read good books in particular, the more you will be able to discern what makes writing good or bad. Taste is something that develops over time, not something that you're born with that never changes. After a while, once you've developed a stronger sense of what is good writing and what is bad writing, there will still sometimes be people who disagree with you, but you will at least be able to have a little more confidence in your own opinion of whether or not a book is good....
Lynna (post: 1412539) wrote:@ BobtheDuck cool site! pretty useful, although I don't understand why it's so wrong to describe a character. Once I read a story my friend wrote, and got really annoyed because I couldn't picture the characters at all, because there wasn't any description of them. I mean, I can see why some people might prefer not to have the character described but...yeah.
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