It's rather disconcerting when one considers that buildings like The Shard are essentially held together by nuts, bolts and washers.
Read MoreCompare and contrast: Nuts and bolts

It's rather disconcerting when one considers that buildings like The Shard are essentially held together by nuts, bolts and washers.
Read MoreLike, I suspect, many people, I have never knowingly come across an isosceles triangle in my life, and wouldn’t know what to do with it if I did. However...
Read MoreSo are elevator speeches completely useless? On the contrary, I think you need to develop several of them.
Read MorePhoto by Terry Freedman
In 2023 I wrote an article about my enjoyment of cafés over the years — three in particular. I’ve used Google’s Notebook LM AI program to provide a summary — and an automated discussion. The latter is quite gob-smacking.
Read Morestation platform, by Terry Freedman
Transport in London these days is, for the most part, sleek, efficient. The epitome of this newish Utopia is the Elizabeth Line, with its silent, gliding carriages, air-conditioning and wi-fi. The announcements are soothing...
Read MoreThis book may be thirty years old, but its advice is still pertinent. If you want to have a blitz or crackdown against, or shake-up of, bad writing (all examples of 'tabloidese'), then this is the book for you.
Read MoreIntroducing and applying Conway's Law, Gresham's Law and the sunken cost fallacy to the practice of writing.
Read MoreA fascinating glimpse into the mind and development of a true virtuoso.
Read MoreIn this essay I have used three different AI apps to analyse a piece of my writing, and to make suggestions for improvement.
Read MoreOne of the things I’ve been trying out is reworking a piece of text into a completely different style. This one was written in the style of Borges.
Read MoreLibraries, by Terry Freedman
The worst thing about belonging to more than one library is that it's all too easy to take a book back to the wrong one. I did that a few months ago, and the following conversation ensued.
Read MoreWhen writing short-form I think it helps to think in terms of the minimum viable wordage, or MVW...
Read MoreI’ve been thinking about definitions of success recently.
Read MoreWe visited the William Morris Gallery at the weekend, and Chaucer’s Complete Works was one of the books Wm Morris published.
Read MoreKnighton Wood, by Terry Freedman
It is understandable that an ambitious young man, in his late twenties and early thirties, wanting success in all its various guises, and with a belief in the power of the mind, would be attracted to certain kinds of books, tapes and courses. The young man I’m talking about was, of course, me.
Read MoreThis article is an excerpt from a longer one that appeared on my Eclecticism newsletter.
Read MoreYou’ve heard of six-word stories. How about nano non-fiction?
Read MoreThe scream by Terry Freedman.jpg
It was my intention to provide you with a guide to style guides. But...
Read MoreThe art of making paper was kept secret for hundreds of years.
Read MoreI’ve been sent the following books by publishers, and will review them in due course. Here is some information about them.
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