Writing Exercise of the Week:  Playing with Paragraphs

I thought we’d explore the exciting world of re-writing in this week’s exercise.

Pick a Paragraph

Find a paragraph from something you’ve written – either in the past or your current WIP – and either copy and paste it into a separate document on your computer.  If it’s handwritten, you can type it into a new document.

If you don’t have anything, pick a paragraph from a book you’ve read.  

This paragraph should be five or more sentences.

Make it Brief

Read through the paragraph.  What’s the main point of the information presented?  How can that information be conveyed in fewer sentences or fewer words?

Does the information presented in the original paragraph still come across in the new, shorter version?  How could the information presented in the original paragraph be cut down to one sentence?  

Expand, Expand, Expand

Using the original paragraph, how can you expand upon the information provided and turn the paragraph’s content into a page-long paragraph?  Could you add details, more flowery language, or expand upon the information provided without obscuring the meaning of the original paragraph?

Does the longer paragraph still convey the original’s meaning, or is it somehow lost in the expanded translation?

Square One

Start over.  Re-write the original paragraph to communicate the same information in the same amount of space, but create a whole new paragraph. 

How does the rewritten one differ from the original?  What did you add or remove that gave the paragraph greater clarity or might cause confusion?

Why Am I Doing This?

When it comes to writing, editing is part of the process.  Sometimes we might come across a paragraph or section of our story that needs further information or detail to give information to the audience.

Other times we might have to cut down a paragraph to its bare bones but still need to convey the same information.  This skill will be helpful if you’re dealing with a required word count.

Examples?

An author who is excellent at communicating a lot of info in a short space is James Patterson.

On the flip side, George R.R. Martin is an author who can expand a small idea into a long-form paragraph. 

I recommend reading or skimming their works for examples of long and short paragraphs.

Happy Writing, and I’ll see you next time!

Writing Tip of the Week: It Costs Nothing to Create

Happy 2023!  I hope everyone had a great holiday season and gave themselves some solid writing, reading, or other creative goals for the New Year.  

Starting this week, I will post on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays for the rest of the year.

So, let’s get started!


Creativity.  For some people, it flows out of them like water over Niagara Falls.  But even the most prolific creatives among us had to start from square one of their creative journeys.

They all had a Day Zero.

We’ve all been there.  You may be there right now, deciding to work on your creative side this year by sitting down at a computer or with pen and paper to start your journey.

Whether you churn out novels as fast as James Patterson or you’re still outlining your first story, the concept of creativity is a free and consistently renewable resource.

And we all have the power to access it 24/7, 365 days a year.

Creativity begins with you.  It starts with the ideas inside your mind and imagination, which are available to you without a monthly subscription or annual renewal notices.

Yes, creativity takes time, takes effort, takes energy.  Still, the overarching results of tapping into your creative side to write, paint, perform, or sculpt can pay out much more significant benefits in the long run.

We think.  We overthink, and we agonize and worry.  We look at published novels and finished films and panic that we’ll never be at that level.  But even those projects started with a free spark of creativity.  A moment where someone said to themselves: “What If….”

Tonight, write something down.  An idea that’s been racing around your brain like a caffeinated hamster.  A creative endeavor you want to pursue in 2023 that you know you can accomplish if you dig in and focus on what needs to be done.

You have the power, the ability, and the freedom to create, and all it takes is a visit to the Free Library of Creativity inside your imagination.

Make it happen.

Happy Writing, and I’ll see you next time!