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Hardcover Revising fiction: A handbook for writers Book

ISBN: 0760731012

ISBN13: 9780760731017

Revising fiction: A handbook for writers

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Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

$5.49
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Book Overview

A primer for writers of fiction, this book offers important rules for revising their work. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

It's good but...

The book is VERY good as a checklist for revising your fiction, but I would ONLY recommend it for confident writers who already have some experience. Of the nearly 200 self-examination questions in it, nearly ALL of them are written in the negative. ("Is your story too this? Not enough that? Does it lack this? Have you failed to do that?")I wanted to share it with a group of beginning writers, but after reviewing the checklist questions, I found that for most new writers, the overwhelming number of potential negatives would be too daunting and might even discourage them from writing altogether.A good book but I don't recommend it for beginning writers.

Revising is commplicated

Revising is complicated enough; however, if one is unable to identify the problem, revising becomes impossible. Many writing problems have to do with structural errors. Madden's book elegantly and clearly defines a myriad of structural elements that might be at the root of such errors and poses each element as a question, such as: "Does the protagonist fail to affect the other characters?" or, "Have you in some way diffused the impact of the climax?" or, "Do passages that reflect your own biases or judgments intrude?" Each question is followed by a detailed answer that includes examples from the writing of Faulkner, James Dickey, Ray Carver, Fitzgerald, V. Woolf, James Joyce, to name but a few. Madden sometimes gives, by way of example, an earlier version of a famous writer's text and compares it to the writer's revised version. For example, Madden discusses the "device of implication" in "...the five versions of the opening of Mrs. Dalloway." I found this book to be invaluable, not only for its practical advice, but for its inherent encouragment. There is nothing like being able to see that one's favorite writers struggled constantly with issues of revision, sometimes even after the publication of a book, such as Fitzgerald's post-publication restructuring of Tender is the Night.
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