Ziegler has a lot of great quotes in his book, The Writing
Workshop Notebook, but this one made me laugh and at the same time it rings
very true. I spend a lot of time on picking the right words. I spend even more
time picking out names of characters and places.
Words have power. They set tone and image and put the reader
into the world you are creating. My wife thinks I spend too much time worrying
about such things, but the wrong word can be jarring or confusing to the
reader, and may draw them out of the story, maybe for only a moment, but great
writing is experienced, not just read. When done extraordinarily well, the
author becomes invisible and the reader simply goes along for the ride.
Contrary-wise, when the wrong words are chosen, or when
there are too many, the reader gets bogged down and can certainly tell there is
a conductor at the front of the locomotive who is determined to drive the train
off the tracks.
Writers can fall in love with certain passages, and
sometimes it can be to the detriment of the story. Less is more may be a
cliché, but it's usually true. We've all read stories that were clunky or
overly wordy. It's actually one of my pet peeves. I get irritated when the
author goes on and on about a particular subject or describes everything in
sight in excruciating detail. The consequence is that I skip the passage. If
the writer stubbornly continues I may put the book down altogether.
I actually did a blog post about Neal Stephenson's Reamde,
Don't Reamde!, if you care to read it, because he is about the most verbose
writer of our generation. He doesn't use an editor anymore, at least that is
the rumor, and the book could be easily half the length and still tell the same
story. I will never read another of his books because he loves his words too
much.
Sometimes even when you love them you need to set them free!
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