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Writerisms
and other Sins: A Writer's Shortcut to Stronger Writing
Copyright © 1995 by C.J.
Cherryh
Copy and pass "Writerisms and other Sins" around
to your heart's content, but always post my Copyright notice
at the top, correctly, thank you, as both a courtesy and
a legal necessity to protect any writer.
Writerisms: overused and misused language. In more direct
words: find 'em, root 'em out, and look at your prose without
the underbrush.
1. am, is, are, was, were, being, be, been …
combined with "by" or with "by …
someone" implied but not stated. Such structures are
passives. In general, limit passive verb use to one or two
per book. The word "by" followed by a person is
an easy flag for passives.
2. am, is, are, was, were, being, be, been …
combined with an adjective. "He was sad as
he walked about the apartment." "He moped about
the apartment." A single colorful verb is stronger
than any was + adjective; but don't slide to the polar opposite
and overuse colorful verbs. There are writers that vastly
overuse the "be" verb; if you are one, fix it.
If you aren't one---don't, because overfixing it will commit
the next error.
3. florid verbs. "The car grumbled
its way to the curb" is on the verge of being so colorful
it's distracting. {Florid fr. Lat. floreo, to flower.}
If a manuscript looks as if it's sprouted leaves and branches,
if every verb is "unusual," if the vocabulary
is more interesting than the story … fix it by going
to more ordinary verbs. There are vocabulary-addicts who
will praise your prose for this but not many who can simultaneously
admire your verbs as verbs and follow your story, especially
if it has content. The car is not a main actor and not one
you necessarily need to make into a character. If its action
should be more ordinary and transparent, don't use an odd
expression. This is prose.
This statement also goes for unusual descriptions and
odd adjectives, nouns, and adverbs.
4. odd connectives. Some writers overuse
"as" and "then" in an attempt to avoid
"and" or "but," which themselves can
become a tic. But "as" is only for truly simultaneous
action. The common deck of conjunctions available is:
* when (temporal)
* if (conditional)
* since (ambiguous between temporal and causal)
* although (concessive)
* because (causal)
* and (connective)
* but (contrasting)
* as (contemporaneous action or sub for "because")
while (roughly equal to "as")
These are the ones I can think of. If you use some too
much and others practically never, be more even-handed.
Then, BTW, is originally more of an adverb than a proper
conjunction, although it seems to be drifting toward use
as a conjunction. However is really a peculiar conjunction,
demanding in most finicky usage to be placed *after* the
subject of the clause.
Don't forget the correlatives, either … or, neither
… nor, and "not only … but also."
And "so that," "in order that," and
the far shorter and occasionally merciful infinitive: "to
… {verb}something."
5. Descriptive writerisms.
Things that have become "conventions of prose"
that personally stop me cold in text.
* "framed by" followed by hair, tresses, curls,
or most anything cute.
* "swelling bosom"
* "heart-shaped face"
* "set off by": see "framed by"
* "revealed" or "revealed by": see "framed
by." Too precious for words when followed by a fashion
statement.
* Mirrors … avoid mirrors, as a basic rule of your
life. You get to use them once during your writing career.
Save them for more experience. But it doesn't count if they
don't reflect … by which I mean see the list above.
If you haven't read enough unpublished fiction to have met
the infamous mirror scenes in which Our Hero admires his
steely blue eyes and manly chin, you can scarcely imagine
how bad they can get.
* limpid pools and farm ponds: I don't care what it is,
if it reflects your hero and occasions a description of
his manly dimple, it's a mirror.
As a general rule … your viewpoint characters should
have less, rather than more, description than anyone else:
a reader of different skin or hair color ought to be able
to sink into this persona without being continually jolted
by contrary information.
Stick to what your observer can observe. One's own blushes
can be felt, but not seen, unless one is facing …
.a mirror. See above.
* "as he turned, then stepped aside from the descending
blow … " First of all, it takes longer to read
than to happen: pacing fault. Second, the "then"
places action #2 sequentially after #1, which makes the
whole evasion sequence a 1-2 which won't work. This guy
is dead or the opponent was telegraphing his moves in a
panel-by-panel comic book style which won't do for regular
prose. Clunky. Slow. Fatally slow.
* "Again" or worse "once again." Established
writers don't tend to overuse this one: it seems like a
neo fault, possibly a mental writerly stammer---lacking
a next thing to do, our hero does it "again" or
"once again" or "even yet." Toss "still"
and "yet" onto the pile and use them sparingly.
6. Dead verbs. Colorless verbs.
* walked
* turned
* crossed
* run, ran
* go, went, gone
* leave, left
* have, had
* get, got
You can add your own often used colorless verbs: these
are verbs that convey an action but don't add any other
information. A verb you've had to modify (change) with an
adverb is likely inadequate to the job you assigned it to
do.
7. Colorless verb with inadequate adverb:
"He walked slowly across the room."
More informative verb with no adverb: "He trudged
across the room," "He paced across the room,"
"He stalked across the room," each one a different
meaning, different situation. But please see problem 3,
above, and don't go overboard.
8. Themely English
With apologies to hard-working English teachers, school
English is not fiction English.
Understand that the meticulous English style you labored
over in school, including the use of complete sentences
and the structure of classic theme-sentence paragraphs,
was directed toward the production of non-fiction reports,
resumes, and other non-fiction applications.
The first thing you have to do to write fiction? Suspect
all the English style you learned in school and violate
rules at need. Many of those rules will turn out to apply;
many won't.
{Be ready to defend your choices. If you are lucky, you
will be copyedited. Occasionally the copyeditor will be
technically right but fictionally wrong and you will have
to tell your editor why you want that particular expression
left alone.}
9. Scaffolding and spaghetti. Words the
sole function of which is to hold up other words. For application
only if you are floundering in too many "which"
clauses. Do not carry this or any other advice to extremes.
"What it was upon close examination was a mass the
center of which was suffused with a glow which appeared
rubescent to the observers who were amazed and confounded
by this untoward manifestation." Flowery and overstructured.
"What they found was a mass, the center of which glowed
faintly red. They'd never seen anything like it." The
second isn't great lit, but it gets the job done: the first
drowns in "which" and "who" clauses.
In other words---be suspicious any time you have to support
one needed word (rubescent) with a creaking framework of
"which" and "what" and "who."
Dump the "which-what-who" and take the single
descriptive word. Plant it as an adjective in the main sentence
10. A short cut to "who" and "whom."
* Nominative: who
* Possessive: whose
* Objective: whom
The rule:
1. treat the "who-clause" as a mini-sentence.
If you could substitute "he" for the who-whom,
it's a "who." If you could substitute "him"
for the who-whom it's a "whom."
The trick is where ellipsis has occurred … or where
parentheticals have been inserted … and the number
of people in important and memorable places who get it wrong.
"Who … do I see?" Wrong: I see he? No. I
see "him." Whom do I see?
2. "Who" never changes case to match an antecedent.
(word to which it refers)
* I blame them who made the unjust law. CORRECT.
* It is she whom they blame. CORRECT: The who-clause is
WHOM THEY BLAME.
* They blame HER=him, =whom.
* I am the one WHO is at fault. CORRECT.
* I am the one WHOM they blame. CORRECT.
* They took him WHOM they blamed. CORRECT---but not because
WHOM matches HIM: that doesn't matter: correct because "they"
is the subject of "blamed" and "whom"
is the object.
* I am he WHOM THEY BLAME. CORRECT. Whom is the "object"
of "they blame."
Back to rule one: "who" clauses are completely
independent in case from the rest of the sentence. The case
of "who" in its clause changes by the internal
logic of the clause and by NO influence outside the clause.
Repeat to yourself: there is no connection, there is no
connection 3 x and you will never mistake for whom the bell
tolls.
The examples above probably grate over your nerves. That's
why "that" is gaining in popularity in the vernacular
and why a lot of copyeditors will correct you incorrectly
on this point. I'm beginning to believe that nine tenths
of the English-speaking universe can't handle these little
clauses.
11. -ing.
"Shouldering his pack and setting forth, he crossed
the river … "
No, he didn't. Not unless his pack was in the river. Implies
simultaneity. The participles are just like any other verbal
form. They aren't a substitute legal everywhere, or a quick
fix for a complex sequence of motions. Write them on the
fly if you like, but once imbedded in text they're hard
to search out when you want to get rid of their repetitive
cadence, because -ing is part of so many fully constructed
verbs {am going, etc.}
12. -ness
A substitute for thinking of the right word. "Darkness,"
"unhappiness," and such come of tacking -ness
(or occasionally - ion) onto words. There's often a better
answer. Use it as needed.
As a general rule, use a major or stand-out vocabulary
word only once a paragraph, maybe twice a page, and if truly
outre, only once per book. Parallels are clear and proper
exceptions to this, and don't vary your word choice to the
point of silliness: see error 3.
CHERRYH'S LAW: NO RULE SHOULD BE FOLLOWED OFF A CLIFF.
This article is Copyright. Reproduction and distribution
specifically prohibited. All rights reserved. Reprinted
here with the author's permission.
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