5 Tips for Good Writing
Many of us mistakenly assume that the process of writing is one
hundred percent inspiration and zero percent perspiration, but that's just not
the way things are. Admittedly, there's a bit of inspiration necessary to any
good story, but that's not what I'm talking about here. What I'm going to
highlight are five solid techniques necessary for good writing. This could be a
work of fiction, or a technical journal article, or just about anything in
between. What matters here is that anything worthy of being written well
has within its DNA one or all of these techniques. Let's take a quick look
at each one:
1. All good works of writing contain descriptions within
them, and it's just what it means. A writer uses it to help a reader
"see" what the writer himself is trying to say. When done well,
the reader can hear, see, taste, smell, and even feel what the writer or the
writer's characters also hear, see, taste, smell, and feel. When you write
a description, keep in mind the goal of assisting the reader in being better
able to understand the people, places, and things contained within the
story.
2. The process of informing, explaining, and clarifying a
writer's thoughts and ideas in a written piece of work is more formally known
as exposition. You most commonly see expository writing in
newspapers, magazines, and non-fiction books, especially. Exposition is a
way to offer the reader a window into your ideas and thoughts as a writer.
3. Writers many times will use the act of narration when
trying to tell a real story. Narrative writing is all around us, and we
see it evident in stories that have characters, a setting in which the
characters interact, a time frame, a problem, and also the various attempts at
solving that problem. Novels and bedtime stories quite often use narration
as their storytelling device, as do movie scripts and stage plays.
4. Whenever a writer is engaged in trying to change others'
points of view on a subject, he or she is engaging in persuasion to
do so. Usually, a writer will bring out facts and opinions in an attempt
to try to bring a reader around to a certain way of looking at
things. Politicians, in their speech making, attempt to employ persuasion
all the time. You can also see it used in editorials and letters to the
editor of a newspaper.
5. The
last technique commonly used by writers is the process of compare and
contrast when it comes to producing some piece of work. In it,
writers will point out or highlight the similarities and differences between
something(s) or some topic. We use comparison to show others what is alike
or in common, while we contrast to show what isn't alike or not in
common. An example of this would be how we traveled across the country in
1920 versus how we do so today.
When you're interested in communicating your ideas, as a writer,
more clearly and cleanly, you'll almost subconsciously use one, two, or even
all five of the above techniques almost without knowing it, once you know how
to properly use each individually.

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