The incredible shrinking story...N M Browne

 I have been teaching again. I talk a lot about brevity. I go on (at some length) about being succinct,

getting to the point, not getting bogged down in needless waffle, unnecessarily verbose syntactical constructions and mindless repetition. 

 I am not someone who has ever found myself hidebound by my own advice, but lately I have been writing poetry and I now discover that I find a thirty two line sestina too prolix. When I move on to writing a story, I am hacking back so much that I think I am in negative word counts. Perhaps if I carry on this way I may dispense with words altogether and simply write: '?' 

I am sure it is temporary and I will recover my appetite for verbosity shortly. In the meantime: '?'

Comments

Peter Leyland said…
Well your blog struck a chord with me this morning Nicky. I am about to teach my African Novels course and am summarising everything that moves. I am at present making 'succinct' notes on Things Fall Apart so that I will remember it, and simultaneously planning a shortened version of Achebe's life story. The art of writing precis at school was one of my most useful learning skills! Thanks for your interesting post and hope that your lessons are going well.
Umberto Tosi said…
I'll keep this brief ... :D

Popular posts

A Few Discreet Words About Caesar's Penis--Reb MacRath

A writer's guide to Christmas newsletters - Roz Morris

Margery Allingham and ... knitting? Casting on a summer’s mystery -- by Julia Jones

Irresistably Drawn to the Faustian Pact: Griselda Heppel Channels her Inner Witch for World Book Day 2024.

Got Some Book Tokens? -- by Susan Price