Doglegs your yachtswoman need a boost of instigator?
Read MoreLocking yourself in as far as orators are concerned can lead to more creativity. Phrase: locus and chalet, by Terry Freedman
Locking yourself in as far as orators are concerned can lead to more creativity. Phrase: locus and chalet, by Terry Freedman
Doglegs your yachtswoman need a boost of instigator?
Read MoreLocking yourself in as far as options are concerned can lead to more creativity. Photo: lock and chain, by Terry Freedman
Does your writing need a boost of inspiration?
Read MoreMost press releases are boring. Even worse, some are annoying. And the people who send them can be even more annoying.
Read MoreProofreading, by Terry Freedman
Those people who implore us to always have someone else proofread a piece of writing are, annoyingly, completely correct.
Read MoreYou might think that recording an interview, and then transcribing it using an app like Otter, would be much faster than writing everything down at the time.
Read MoreConversing, by Terry Freedman
Who would have thought that during lockdown, a time that you can venture out of your front door only if your life depends on it (or you’ve run out of milk), it’s been possible to have conversations with all sorts of people?
Read MoreNo thanks!, by Terry Freedman
Adverbs serve a purpose, or they wouldn’t exist, they would have fallen into disuse.
Read MoreBlogger, by Terry Freedman
If you're going to blog, please don't disrespect your reader by publishing non-proofed copy, verbose (aka pompous) writing, gratuitous swearing, incorrect words and other horrors that could easily be avoided.
Read MorePart of a blogging SWOT analysis using digital post-it notes, by Terry Freedman
Blogging is not necessarily easy. Even if writing itself is not a problem, there are several other factors that need to be taken into account.
Read MoreA tree, by Terry Freedman. I selected this photo to accompany the article because it’s expansive, reaching upwards and outwards, and flourishing. That’s what we writers should be like!
When Sugar Pi De Santo sang “Use what you got”, I’m fairly certain that she wasn’t referring to writing and getting articles published. However, the sentiment expressed, especially in the first verse, can be applied more generally.
Read Morehazardous area by Terry Freedman
Technical writing may not sound like the most exciting thing in the world, but (a) there’s a great need for it and (b) a huge degree of satisfaction is gained from writing user manuals that ordinary mortals can understand.
Read MoreI like to think that had there been anti-plagiarism software around when I was at school, and had my English teacher used it, I’d have been saved years of wasting time looking for ways to make money. I’d have enjoyed more sleep too.
Read MoreI failed to do much __________ , but I was pleased to have __________ a further 17% of my __________
Read MoreRoy Peter Clark describes and analyses fifty five strategies for writers.
Read MoreSteps, by Terry Freedman
Different people approach articles in different ways. I think it would be rather presumptuous of me to lay down the correct order of doing things. Therefore, this is a checklist of things to do.
Read MoreOn the face of it, experimenting with reworking a piece of writing is pointless. I mean, why bother?
Read MoreAs you may know, the Dice Man makes all his decisions on the basis of a throw of the dice. Imagine if Hamlet was the Dice Man…
Read MoreLike Chekhov's gun (if a gun appears in Act 1, it has to be fired at some point), actions like someone clearing their throat are pointless if they add nothing to how we see them as a character.
Read MoreDystopian Visions, by Terry Freedman
UPDATED! If you’ve never bothered with science fiction — it tends to be the poor cousin of literature — the stories I‘m looking at are, as I say, classics. All of them have really interesting, and prescient, scenarios. Some of them are even well-written!
Read MoreI like photographing scenery in black and white, even though it may seem counterintuitive to do so.
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