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- Path: sparky!uunet!van-bc!rsoft!mindlink!a4099
- From: Alan_Barclay@mindlink.bc.ca (Alan Barclay)
- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Subject: Re: short story writing vs. novel writing
- Message-ID: <14789@mindlink.bc.ca>
- Date: 2 Sep 92 07:53:21 GMT
- Organization: MIND LINK! - British Columbia, Canada
- Distribution: world
- Lines: 22
-
- I never wanted to write short stories, but I got involved in a
- weekly writer's workshop for short stories. It turned out
- to be a great training ground for learning lots of the basics:
- active writing, show-don't-tell, susinctness, dialogue. The
- managable size of the manuscripts meant fast turn over. One
- could leave previous mistakes behind quickly and start on
- something new. Many novel-length works by beginners go on and on
- repeating the same problems and it is a daunting task to correct
- them all.
-
- Of course, I believe in doing the job right the first time, so
- I hate massive rewrites. Other people may find rewrites helpful.
-
- In my mind, what one learns from short story writing only lacks
- one element indispensable to a novel writer--how to weave a lengthy
- plot. I am wrestling with this part'clar 'gator as we speak.
-
- Now that I consider it, I think good feedback is the most important aspect of
- learning to write, not what length of work you start with.
-
- Alan
-
-