3 Main Tips for Writing Articles along with 3 mini tips on your word choice

Written by Laura Hickey


3 Tips when Writing Articles

Do you love to write? Do you want to put those writing skills to good use? Perhaps you want to see your name published whether it be in a newspaper, magazine, e-zine or other forms of publication. Here's 3 tips to start off your New Year.

1.Brainstorm

Once you've decided what your writing is going to be about, brainstorm. Think of a new angle for your article. For example: If you're writing for your local newspaper about an author, don't necessarily write onlyrepparttar obvious details. Is there something about this author that makes them unique? What is so great aboutrepparttar 128636 book they've written, can you tie it with a current news event and or holiday?

2.Removingrepparttar 128637 Fluff is a Must!

When writing a first draft, it's expected to have at least some fluff. Fluff is words, sentences, certain aspects of your article that don't necessarily add to your article. An example would be: “I had no energy. My energy had been sucked out of me” Now that's notrepparttar 128638 great example, but you getrepparttar 128639 point. A good way to tell if you have fluff is to put your article away for a while. Why? Because wen you leave your article for a bit,repparttar 128640 next time you look over you'll see aspects of your article popping out. Certain words, facts and excess information that could easily be removed for a smooth flowing article. 3 fast tips that also apply are:

Can An Old Indian Engineer Write Fiction?

Written by Michael LaRocca


CAN AN OLD INDIAN ENGINEER WRITE FICTION? Copyright 2004, Michael LaRocca

An author emailed me three "disadvantages" to her decision to become a writer. Let me answer them one by one.

"1. I'm seventy now and retired."

You are seventy years old. Do NOT list this as a drawback. I'm almost 30 years younger than you but I'm gonna harp on you like your grandmother. NEVER call your age a drawback. I started writing when I was 17. I was terrible. Do you know why? I think you do. I don't even have to quoterepparttar old cliche. "First you live it, then you write it." Everybody says that. There's a reason they say it.

By that, I don't mean to literally write about your life. I don't even do that when I'm writing autobiography. I mean that you can't write about real people in real life until you've seen them and it for yourself. Imagination is a wonderful thing, but it takes more than that to write convincingly. You know that. Why are you even asking a kid like me?

"2. Being an engineer, I lack a literary background."

There are several ways to tackle this one, depending on what it means. If "literary background" means reading, that's a problem. I assumed it didn't mean that. If it means some sort of schooling inrepparttar 128634 art of writing, I wrote a lengthy article about that recently. (School sux.)

If it refers to some deep-seated fear that you lackrepparttar 128635 magical mystical gift that makes us writers, that's BS. You know I swear byrepparttar 128636 power of rewriting, and I thinkrepparttar 128637 logical mind of an engineer may be better suited for it.

We're not beatnik poets who don't know what their own words mean but just say, "Feelrepparttar 128638 heaviness, man." Writing isn't a sprint. It's a marathon. You have to write and rewrite and polish your gem more times than any non-writer will ever realize.

The words DO matter. You have to say what you mean, as opposed to makingrepparttar 128639 reader guess, and I can think of many good things to say about approachingrepparttar 128640 task with a left-brained sensibility. Bring allrepparttar 128641 right-brain you can, of course. Just don't forget that's only part ofrepparttar 128642 process.

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