The writer's idea book

Jack Heffron, 1957-

Book - 2000

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

808.02/Heffron
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 808.02/Heffron Checked In
Subjects
Published
Cincinnati : Writer's Digest Books 2000.
Language
English
Main Author
Jack Heffron, 1957- (-)
Physical Description
262 p.
Bibliography
Includes index.
ISBN
9780898798739
  • Introduction
  • Part I. Bending and Stretching
  • Chapter 1. Making Your Way to Schenectady
  • Chapter 2. Enemies of Creativity
  • Chapter 3. Leading a Creative Life
  • Chapter 4. Getting Ready to Write
  • Part II. Exploring
  • Chapter 5. I Yam What I Yam and Other Lies
  • Chapter 6. Schnitzel With Noodles
  • Chapter 7. Nellie Malone From Fifth and Stone
  • Chapter 8. With a Banjo on My Knee
  • Chapter 9. Thoughts of a Sundrenched Elsewhere
  • Chapter 10. What's Your Road, Man?
  • Chapter 11. The Love You Make
  • Chapter 12. Don't Get Me Started
  • Chapter 13. Your Fifteen Minutes
  • Chapter 14. All Our Secrets Are the Same
  • Chapter 15. Minding Other People's Business
  • Chapter 16. A Day in the Life of a Writer
  • Chapter 17. A Life of the Spirit
  • Part III. Finding Form
  • Chapter 18. Of Sonnets and Toasters
  • Chapter 19. Folks Like You
  • Chapter 20. The Shape of Things to Come
  • Chapter 21. It All Depends on Your Point of View
  • Chapter 22. Other Rooms, Other Voices
  • Chapter 23. Vast Is the Power of Cities
  • Chapter 24. It Was the Best of Times
  • Chapter 25. A Sort of Miracle
  • Part IV. Assessing and Developing
  • Chapter 26. What's at Stake?
  • Chapter 27. Sitting Still
  • Chapter 28. Tell It Slant
  • Chapter 29. Anything Is Beautiful if You Say It Is
  • A Final Word
  • Index
Review by Library Journal Review

Heffron (Best Writing on Writing: Twenty Master Plots) is a senior editor at Writer's Digest Books and Story Press as well as a published writer and teacher of fiction. In short, he's been on both sides of the printed page, as writer and reader, as well as teacher/coach on the sidelines. Written humorously but with substance, his book identifies some of the more common causes of writer's block and offers many ways to overcome it, from initiating a story, to resurrecting a stalled story, to casting about for a good ending. All the essentials are covered: changes of voice, point of view, the need for or absence of plot, and building characters. The author also quotes other writers and uses brief excerpts from published fiction as examples of what works and what doesn't. This material would be partly redundant for anyone with an MFA, but if the first chapter works for you, the rest of the book will as well. Recommended for public libraries and as a gift idea for the struggling writer in your life.-Robert C. Moore, Raytheon, Sudbury, MA (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.