Books : Turning Life into Fiction: Finding Character, Plot, Setting and Other Elements of Novel and Short Story Writing in the Everyday World
List Price: $14.99Price: $2.18 You Save: $12.81 (85%)Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 808.3
EAN: 9781884910371
ISBN: 1884910378
Label: Story Pr
Manufacturer: Story Pr
Number Of Pages: 208
Publication Date: 1997-09
Publisher: Story Pr
Sales Rank: 410512
Studio: Story Pr
Related Items:
Editorial Review:
Product Description:
A highly entertaining and indispensable manual on how to write good fiction If you want to write at all, whether from real life or not, you must be willing and able to use your imagination. That means you must be willing to take risks and sometimes look the fool. You must be willing to transform experience, not simply record it. If you were a good liar, daydreamer, or troublemaker as a child, you’ll probably make a good fiction writer. Daydreams, lies, and trouble. That’s the stuff of fiction. In Turning Life into Fiction, Robin Hemley offers a highly entertaining and in-depth manual—with writing exercises on how to convert real life into good storytelling. He covers a wide range of subjects, including how to record and generate ideas from daily life and how to write effectively using true anecdotes, real places, and real people. A self-proclaimed liar and thief, Hemley also addresses the legal and ethical concerns of “borrowing” experience from the lives of strangers and loved ones.
Lively, informative, and inspirational, Turning Life into Fiction is an invaluable text for any fiction writer. First published in 1994, this new edition is updated and expanded to include nearly a dozen short stories that Hemley refers to throughout the book.
Amazon.com Review: If you've got friends who are fiction writers, watch out: "Writers are spies, liars, and thieves," writes Robin Hemley in Turning Life into Fiction, and your words, deeds, and character--benevolent and malevolent alike--could be immortalized in print some day. If you write fiction, listen up, look around, and take note. Why strain your brain making things up when you can transform real life into stories worth telling? Hemley recommends keeping a journal ("It's akin to an artist's sketchbook"), writing down your dreams (the unconscious is a great source of free material), and mining all those crazy stories your grandmother used to tell. Then combine bits and pieces from these sources, take one great mind leap (and many drafts) and--voila--you've got fiction. Warning: even though it really happened, it might not be believable. Second warning: while it's hard to know when something you write will offend the person it's based on, says Hemley, "above all, don't mess with male pattern baldness."
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
How many of us have shelves and shelves of writing books...yet when they found this one realized that it was one of the very few that they needed?
I wanted to chime in on the revised edition since I just discovered it yesterday and have not put it down, aside from going to sleep. I am one of those writers who draws inspiration from my own life and the lives of friends and always had an idea of how to go about it, but this book is the black and white, be all and end all.
Here you'll learn that it's OKAY to write from life (those that think it's not as imaginitive be damned), and you'll learn HOW to - best advice being to distance yourself from the story and make it believeable based on DETAIL, vivid characters and emotional honesty - not memory, which is our natural instinct at first.
I love the way each chapter is broken down into the very concerns that we take on in order as we work our way through a story, so it's *extremely* user-friendly and very humorous too! I also love the fact that it's written for an audience that knows about writing already in terms of technique and terminology, and not dumbed down like the rest of the hokey bs that we see. I would rave on and on but I've got some writing to do!
Get this book at once.
Rating: -
Updated and expanded by Robin Hemley (Director of the Nonfiction Writing Program as Iowa University), Turning Life into Fiction is a newly updated and expanded how-to manual for skillfully converting real life experiences into exciting storytelling. Packed with writing exercises, techniques for recording and generating ideas from day-to-day experience, and advice for dealing with the potentially thorny ethical issue of borrowing experiences from the lives of strangers and loved ones, Turning Life into Fiction is a "must-read" for practicing and aspiring fiction writers everywhere. Highly recommended.
Rating: -
The book had some good ideas for the writer. I do think he does banter on a bit.
Rating: -
This book offers tricks and tips to teach you how to use real life situations to develop characters, plot, setting and other elements of story. The author will have you eavesdropping in restuarants and spying on the neighbors in an effort to see how easy it is to come up with believable story.
Rating: -
Robin Hemley covers it all. He immediately engages the reader and his love, as well as his expertise in the craft, is evident in each page. The technical points are covered in a way that leaves you feeling as if you have just read a really good novel. The ethical questions are covered without getting too bogged down. A very inspiring and illuminating book on how to get started writing. B. Bruce, New Caney Tx.
Browse for similar items by category:
|