William Foster-Harris, along with Walter S. Campbell and Dwight V. Swain, created one of the most effective writer-training courses of all time. Their goal was to speed the progress of student-writers and shorten the time of study needed before becoming professional at their craft.
The list of top-flight authors trained by Campbell and Harris includes, among others: Louis L'Amour, Mary Higgins Clark, Fred Grove, Tony Hillerman, Bill Gulick, William R. Scott, Ed Montgomery, Neal Barrett, and Bill Burchardt.
While Campbell emphasized students take an analytical approach to learning their craft by studying published works, Harris did not analyze scenes, settings and characterizations as did Vestal. Instead, he was concerned mostly with the overall effect of the plot and how to achieve it.
Once a student had completed the initial courses under Campbell, Harris took over to hone the skills of would-be fictioneers. His lab-type classes were weekly in-person interviews. He required the student to write one new 5,000-word short story each week, and Foster would then critique it. After the first week, the student would have several stories in the rewrite process together with each new one. When Foster deemed one to be ready, the student would submit it to the market of their choice - and if it sold, that brought a better mark from Foster.
Plotting, which many beginners find the bugaboo of writing, Professor Harris considered no problem at all. "The way to catch a plot," he explains, "is the way to catch a woman. Pretend not to be interested." The student who complains that it is impossible to find a new plot because all the plots have been used, he told, "You don't need a new plot. Just put a little parsley on the same old dish!"
Dwight V. Swain joined the program in 1952. His contribution was through his experience in film scriptwriting, as well as extensive published work in pulp fiction. He expanded and simplified the Scene as both a building block and intrinsic glue for all stories - well beyond Campbell and Harris' foundation.
Learn from Foster-Harris:
Learn from Dwight Swain:
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Dr. Worstell is known for the depth and volume of his research - as well as his published works.
With seven degrees to his credit, ranging from comparative religions to computer networking, there are few fields he hasn't researched as a means to finding workable truths anyone can apply.
His current work is in making fiction writing profitable, and kicking over the bee-hives of established "guru's" in that field. Worstell feels that creating a living by writing should be simple and inexpensive.
Most of his work is available through his blog posts long before they become books. This blog-to-book method is a way of sharing and refining his material broadly to everyone.
Les informations fournies dans la section « A propos du livre » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.
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Taschenbuch. Etat : Neu. nach der Bestellung gedruckt Neuware - Printed after ordering - William Foster-Harris, along with Walter S. Campbell and Dwight V. Swain, created one of the most effective writer-training courses of all time. Their goal was to speed the progress of student-writers and shorten the time of study needed before becoming professional at their craft.The list of top-flight authors trained by Campbell and Harris includes, among others: Louis L'Amour, Mary Higgins Clark, Fred Grove, Tony Hillerman, Bill Gulick, William R. Scott, Ed Montgomery, Neal Barrett, and Bill Burchardt.While Campbell emphasized students take an analytical approach to learning their craft by studying published works, Harris did not analyze scenes, settings and characterizations as did Vestal. Instead, he was concerned mostly with the overall effect of the plot and how to achieve it.Once a student had completed the initial courses under Campbell, Harris took over to hone the skills of would-be fictioneers. His lab-type classes were weekly in-person interviews. He required the student to write one new 5,000-word short story each week, and Foster would then critique it. After the first week, the student would have several stories in the rewrite process together with each new one. When Foster deemed one to be ready, the student would submit it to the market of their choice - and if it sold, that brought a better mark from Foster.Plotting, which many beginners find the bugaboo of writing, Professor Harris considered no problem at all. 'The way to catch a plot,' he explains, 'is the way to catch a woman. Pretend not to be interested.' The student who complains that it is impossible to find a new plot because all the plots have been used, he told, 'You don't need a new plot. Just put a little parsley on the same old dish!'Dwight V. Swain joined the program in 1952. His contribution was through his experience in film scriptwriting, as well as extensive published work in pulp fiction. He expanded and simplified the Scene as both a building block and intrinsic glue for all stories - well beyond Campbell and Harris' foundation.Learn from Foster-Harris:the core equations for all plotsachieving the synthesis of writer, reader, and main character to make the story succeedcombining feeling and fact with each sentence to engage the reader with the story's movement through timefitting your story character to the story problem and vice-versadeveloping conflict within the character to make them real and humanthe four parts to the correct short storyuse of tags, pointers, and plants to define characters and move plot alongthe use of linked scenes to involve the reader into a single continuing experiencebuilding a short story into a novelette, and into a novel - and when you shouldn'tfive routine revisions and rewrites necessary to polish the first draftLearn from Dwight Swain:what three things are needed to develop a good novelthe first two items found at the start of any commercially successful novelthe three elements of any scenethe three elements of any scene's sequelhow moving copy requires interlocking motivation-reaction unitswhy you develop contrasting characters in your novelsthe three wishes and four desires all characters wantthe four tests for every scene and chapter in your novelGet Your Copy Now. N° de réf. du vendeur 9798230023463
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Taschenbuch. Etat : Neu. Writerpreneur | The Basic Formulas of Fiction | William Foster Harris (u. a.) | Taschenbuch | Englisch | 2024 | Midwest Journal Press | EAN 9798230023463 | Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, 36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr[at]libri[dot]de | Anbieter: preigu Print on Demand. N° de réf. du vendeur 130672699
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