The "Rules" of Writing
There are a lot of axioms that get tossed around in creative writing courses, books on writing, and of course, the Internet. Often, these little gems are explained to new writers as though they were fact, to be taken for granted.
Just as often, experienced writers will respond by saying "there are no hard and fast rules when it comes to writing", or "rules are made to be broken".
So, the purpose of this question is to provide a place where we can list these axioms or "rules" of writing, and also weigh in on whether they are really self-evident truths or utter garbage (or maybe even something in-between).
Please limit each answer to a single "rule" and express your thoughts on it in the answer itself, or in a comment.
The list so far (alphabetically):
Cut adjectives and adverbs
Don't go into great detail describing places or things
Give yourself permission to suck
Know the end before you begin
Miscellaneous
Show, don't tell
Stay off the internet while writing
Use correct grammar, punctuation and spelling
Write, don't edit
Writing is rewriting
You have to read, and read all the time
You must learn to walk before you can run
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"Said" is All You Need to Say
My favorite writing teacher, way back in the day, told me--rightly--that it is very rarely necessary to use more than the word "said" when writing dialogue, particularly using adverbs.
Almost every time I find myself wanting to use constructions like, "He said excitedly," or the like, I realize I'm better off just saying "said." Part of the reason this happens so much is that, as writers, we are acutely aware of each word. But readers don't notice the repetition of the verb and the adverb rarely conveys enough to be meaningful anyway.
The list so far (alphabetically):
Cut adjectives and adverbs
Don't go into great detail describing places or things
Give yourself permission to suck
Know the end before you begin
Miscellaneous
Show, don't tell
Stay off the internet while writing
Use correct grammar, punctuation and spelling
Write, don't edit
Writing is rewriting
You have to read, and read all the time
You must learn to walk before you can run
Use correct grammar and punctuation (and of course, spelling)
Style doesn't mean squat if your manuscript doesn't flow due to incorrect spelling, grammar and punctuation. There's a reason why the "rules" are there to be followed. They work.
I thought of this is after making my own contribution to this question.
Write What You Know
This is one of those rules that I think is most often misinterpreted. Many aspiring writers and advisors take it to mean 'write only about your personal life experiences and not using your imagination at all'.
Realistically though a writer has to move beyond the strictly autobiographical and create fiction with their imagination. So how to combine the two?
A better understanding is to realise that what you know is emotions, relationships, motivations, describing people and places, tragedy, comedy, and all the many other things that make up the basics of a novel: characters, plot, humour, and drama.
In short, write about what you know: life
Give yourself permission to suck.
That's not to say just write bad stuff, but don't stress about the quality of your writing when you are writing it. Stressing about the quality of the work can keep you from writing and even cause writer's block. You have to accept that what you write won't be perfect at first, but you can fix it when you do your edits and rewrites.
Write Daily.
Never let a day pass without writing something. Even if you have no ideas or mood to write just fill a page with whatever comes to mind. It doesn't matter if it is of garbage quality, just keep writing.
Many times consistency beats creativity. Also writing without any expectation increases your creativity.
Write in the Active Voice
I'm surprised that no one has mentioned active vs. passive voice (for a good discussion, see this Q&A. Like many "rules," there are various reasons to decide otherwise, but in general the active voice is stronger than the passive.
Show, Don't Tell
This may very well be the most popular "rule" of writing. It refers to the idea that it's better to "show" an event as a scene, rather than simply "telling" the reader what happened.
In my opinion, this is mostly sound advice:
Don't tell us the 5000-year history of your fantasy setting in the prologue. Show it to us throughout the story.
Don't tell us the protagonist's girlfriend is beautiful. Show us her flowing black hair, her lips perpetually on the verge of smiling, her brown eyes with those eerie golden flecks.
Don't tell us the thief was nervous. Show us how he has to close his eyes and breathe, just to stop his hands from shaking.
On the other hand, sometimes there is information that the reader needs to know to understand the story, but forcing that information into a scene would divert the plot or bore the reader to tears.
Don't show us the Senators explaining to each other how the seat of the US government is Washington D.C. They have no reason to tell each other what they already know. Instead, just tell us.
Don't show the young wizard taking a tour of the magical staff factory, when he has no business being there. Just tell us that all magical staves are carved from the wood of the whump-whump tree.
More discussion can be found here.
Write, Don't Edit!
The most important rule of all. Everything else is secondary. Even "Show, don't tell".
It is the editor in your head you have to fight. He is nagging you: "You can't do that! What garbage have you written here? Are you serious? You will never be a good writer if you keep doing scribbling this nonsense!"
Well, you can do, you are serious and you scribble all the "nonsense" you like. You have to! Every idea that flashes through your head, write it down. Kick out your editor, kick him hard. The truth is, that more than 90% is garbage, what you are writing. But you will never write down the 10% which are really brilliant if you listen to your editor.
Have you ever started to write a letter or a paragraph of your book, found a spelling error, a grammar error, and stopped writing? Have corrected the error, thought about how you can formulate that better? And after you let your editor interrupt yourself, have you tried to finish your paragraph and did not know, what the hell you wanted to write? It was all gone. You were sitting there for twenty more minutes to make something up, when you knew what you wanted to write, when you started. But you listened to the bastard in your head, the editor, and now it's all gone. Silence him! Write, don't edit. You have plenty of time editing, when everything is written down.
Break The Rules
Most of the rules here already note that exceptions should always be made, and You must learn to walk before you can run is generally good advice.
However, these rules apply mostly to the act of writing itself. There are another set of rules in writing, those of genre. Some of the best creative writing hinges on breaking moulds. An excellent example is William Gibson's Neuromancer. Gibson is quoted in an interview as saying:
I had a sense of what the expectations of the SF industry were in
terms of product, but I hated that product and felt such a genuine
sense of disgust that I consciously decided to reverse expectations,
not give publishers or readers what they wanted.
This example is particularly nice because it also breaks the walk-before-running rule: Neuromancer was Gibson's first attempt at a novel.
Kill your darlings
The idea is that the mind is able to think "ingenious" about any old idea, and that the truth of that assessment can only be tested by trying the idea in reality.
Unfortunately sometimes an idea will not work, but the "ingenious tag" persists and we try anything we can to keep our idea in play, even bend reality!
This is when you need to remove that concept, scene, sentence in order to make the story (or any other enterprise) work.
One way to implement this is to keep a separate file (the "Darling file") where you move all your darling scenes, sentences, and concepts. That way you haven't really killed your darlings permanently dead as much as removed them "for later use" (You'll probably get back to that file in a couple of years and realize they truly were darlings and they truly did not belong in your story...)
This, of course is a rule that can be broken. An example is the author John Ajvide Lindqvist ("Let the Right One in"), who has claimed he never kills his darlings.
Know the end before you begin.
Everything has to lead up to the end. The climax is the culmination of everything in the story. By knowing the end, you can include powerful foreshadowing and ensure that you don't go off on useless tangents.
Value a "fresh eyes" point of view on your material
This is a set of tips and techniques to try to come at your material with fresh eyes (especially after the first draft).
Set the first draft aside for a few months
When you have finished the first draft, set it aside for a few months (2-3) before you read it again.
The idea is to come at the material with somewhat fresh eyes (something that is very hard when you're the writer). It also helps to let go of it a bit before going into editing so you have a more objective view of your text.
Work with beta readers and a critique group
The beta reader usually falls into two categories (and optionally you have access to both):
Readers from your target group that will be able to tell you if the story "works," if it was "engaging," and if they "liked it"
Other writers, for instance in a critique group, that will also be able to talk about the craftsmanship of your writing. And, more importantly, might be able to not just say what doesn't work, but also offer advice on how to fix it.
The most important aspect of a beta reader is that they have not seen your text before and will be able to talk about it more or less objectively.
How to Write Good
The first set of rules was written by Frank L. Visco and originally
published in the June 1986 issue of Writers' digest. The second set of
rules is derived from William Safire's Rules for Writers.
Avoid alliteration. Always.
Prepositions are not words to end sentences with.
Avoid cliches like the plague. (They're old hat.)
Employ the vernacular.
Eschew ampersands & abbreviations, etc.
Parenthetical remarks (however relevant) are unnecessary.
It is wrong to ever split an infinitive.
Contractions aren't necessary.
Foreign words and phrases are not apropos.
One should never generalize.
Eliminate quotations. As Ralph Waldo Emerson once said: "I hate quotations. Tell me what you know."
Comparisons are as bad as cliches.
Don't be redundant; don't more use words than necessary; it's highly superfluous.
Profanity sucks.
Be more or less specific.
Understatement is always best.
Exaggeration is a billion times worse than understatement.
One-word sentences? Eliminate.
Analogies in writing are like feathers on a snake.
The passive voice is to be avoided.
Go around the barn at high noon to avoid colloquialisms.
Even if a mixed metaphor sings, it should be derailed.
Who needs rhetorical questions?
While a transcendent vocabulary is laudable, one must nevertheless keep incessant surveillance against such loquacious, effusive, voluble
verbosity that the calculated objective of communication becomes
ensconced in obscurity.
In a sentence, the nouns has to match the verbs.
Don't use no double negatives.
In writing, few things are, so to speak, more infuriating, than, say, commas, at least when there are too many of them, or when they
should be, say, semicolons.
Proofread your work, so you don't leave some out or forget to finish
Run-on sentences are really bad because the reader saturates and what you really should be doing is using commas and semicolons and
even periods to break the sentence up into more digestible chunks.
To have been using excessively complex verb constructions, is to have been bopping the literary baloney.
A friend I spoken with recently told me he been forgetting his helper verbs.
I like Elmore Leonard's 10 rules:
Never open a book with weather.
Avoid prologues.
Never use a verb other than "said" to carry dialogue.
Never use an adverb to modify the verb "said”…he admonished gravely.
Keep your exclamation points under control. You are allowed no more than two or three per 100,000 words of prose.
Never use the words "suddenly" or "all hell broke loose."
Use regional dialect, patois, sparingly.
Avoid detailed descriptions of characters.
Don't go into great detail describing places and things.
Try to leave out the part that readers tend to skip.
My most important rule is one that sums up the 10.
If it sounds like writing, I rewrite it.
I would say,
First write whatever is in your mind.
Organize it.
Read it as a reader and see whats lacking and what would the reader
be thinking while reading the article.
Following these rules would help you make your point clearer to the readers.
Also, one good rule I know about life and writing is,
Always make improvements. When you come across something better,
improve it. Make corrections in the previous articles and keep doing
it. It would help you learn.
You have to read, and read all the time.
There are no iron laws of writing. I'm sure that if I told you that it was impossible to do good writing without reading much, someone could find a handful of examples of great writers who barely read.
But for the rest of us normal human beings, writing isn't something that happens in a vacuum. To understand writing you have to see how it's been done before. Even the really bad stuff will teach you something.
So read, and don't just read one thing. Read literature, read genre, read nonfiction, read comic books; read a lot and read a lot of different things.
Develop.
When you are excited in what about you are writing, you have a good chance that your reader will be excited too.
Develop the beginning.
Develop the story.
Develop the ending.
Everything you write is in other words what your feel. If you feel bored, your words and writing will be the same, if you feel yourself in the story you can make impossible things.
Develop by mass writing. The more you write, the more you can be better at it.
Cut 10% of your first draft in editing
This tip is from Stephen King's memoir "On Writing." He got the tip as a comment in one of his rejection letters.
The idea is that the language of your first draft is going to be flowery and full of superfluous words.
Cutting 10% of those words will tighten your prose.
King includes an example of how he edited the first draft of "1408," and rather than removing whole blocks of text or whole sentences, he had cut a word here and a couple of words there.
In my interpretation this rule should be applied to the scenes you decide to keep in the text, rather than removing whole scenes to remove 10% of the text as a whole.
Don’t go into great detail describing places and things
This is one of Elmore Leonard's "Ten Rules." I selected it from the list almost at random -- all ten are worth heeding. I love it because it's so counterintuitive -- you want to add color and detail to your story, right? No, you don't. You want to add story to your story, and just enough descriptive detail to bring it to life, which is generally a lot less than you would think. One brilliantly-chosen detail is worth half a page of description, no matter how beautifully it was written.
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