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Sam Rake's avatar

These are the bread and butter of any Screenwriting guide book written in the past five years. You can usually tell the type by the name: "The Secrets of Story", "The Anatomy of Story", "Writing Great Fiction: Storytelling Tips and Techniques". I thought they'd be useful even if I don't write screenplays - there isn't a ballast of novel-writing guides...

Some of the advice in those books is useful. Mostly, it's useful for writing exactly one type of story: a daytime TV comedy or crime drama. If you want to your fiction to be exactly like episodes of Rizzoli & Isles, then this advice is S-tier. For anything else, take it with an even LARGER pinch of salt.

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Proximus's avatar

I... have opinions. Here is my advice to any writers in this comment section:

- I think it's a good technique to start a story in the middle to create intrigue, but only if it's a sequel.

- With the sentences, I think it's good to switch between nice, long, rambling sentences and short choppy sentences.

- Wait, some people just stick with said?! I spend like thirty percent of my writing time trying to come up with alternatives, lol.

- I love adjectives and adverbs. We need more, at the very least three a sentence.

- Go for the longest, obscurest, recherché word

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