MUSE
March's column for The Greater Canton Writers’ Guild
Newsletter
Content
can be contentious
I
drive my husband batty when I “eyeball” things. I trust my eyes, but he trusts
his yardstick more. Our eyes can deceive us, no matter how we feel about
something. Thirty-four inches is not a yard no matter how I feel about it, or
how it looks at a distance. This is a
unit of measure. We all use it. Architects, builders, designers, mechanics,
engineers, cooks and artists. This list could go on. As writers we use the
dictionary (or dictionary.com), and grammar rules. Editors and publishers use
another unit of measure upon which they base their decisions. A standard is a unit of measure, however much
they vary from publisher to publisher. They have a bar by which all submissions
must reach in order to be considered for publication by them. Depending upon
publication (and their readership), some standards are higher while others are
much lower. And for many writers there
is an emotional attachment to our work that keeps us from seeing clearly any necessary corrections we need to make in order to make our work commercially appealing in order to sell it. And selling it will get our work into more hands.
We cannot base the rightness or wrongness of our writing
based upon how we feel about it, for we all feel differently. Some writers use
content to shock their readers for attention.
When an overuse of expletives is used, the reader’s focus
unintentionally shifts to the words used rather than the story line.
Not all words are created equal
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