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- From: jtchew@csa3.lbl.gov (JOSEPH T CHEW)
- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Subject: Re: writing insecurities
- Date: 12 Aug 92 23:49:14 GMT
- Organization: Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory - Berkeley, CA, USA
- Lines: 17
- Message-ID: <25443@dog.ee.lbl.gov>
- References: <92225.154641U52892@uicvm.uic.edu>
- Reply-To: jtchew@csa3.lbl.gov
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-
- >I'm a good reporter but not a good writer. My articles are often
- >well-researched and substantial but structure is weak and awkward.
- >How will I become a good writer?
-
- The part you're good at is the more important part, and the less
- common. With time and practice you'll learn to put together a
- decent, craftsmanlike story. Meanwhile, take heart; there are
- plenty of slick writers who don't have the mixture of inspiration
- ("what is news?", indeed) and doggedness that journalism requires.
- You may envy their prose style, but they couldn't do your job.
-
- Now quit worrying about it and go find out where the toxic waste
- is being dumped, or who is paying off the building inspector, or one
- of those other things that are so much more important than writing.
-
- --Joe
- "Just another personal opinion from the People's Republic of Berkeley"
-