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Posts tagged Art

When Time Travel Works

Although I have no desire to be seventeen again (or even twenty five or thirty five) I love time travel stories. The logic is always flawed, but the premise intrigues me every time.

What if we could as easily travel back in time as we travel now to other continents or into space?

I might visit my dad and have a nice long chat. Or maybe my grandparents.

Perhaps I'd see Hemingway in… Continue reading

Reading Fiction Changed My Life

Why do business, professional, and political folks read fiction? Maybe the best reason is that reading fiction is fun for us. It's how we relax, how we relate to the world. We're well educated and most of what we know we learned through reading. By this time, we're all adults and we've been reading for decades. We enjoy it.

We like the feel of books, the

Creating Great Comedy Through Dialogue

Are you watching the sitcom "Big Bang Theory?" It's fun and funny. Jim Parsons, the guy who plays Sheldon, is an acting genius. Watch his face and his body as he delivers his lines.  He was nominated for an Emmy this week, as well he should have been. I hope he wins, too.
 
The basic premise of the show is: "4 nerds and an actress babe." Despite this rather simplistic

Lawyers Discover Why Drama Requires “Show Don’t Tell”

I'd been writing fiction with intent to publish for more than fifteen years when I finally understood an imporatant difference between exposition and dramatic writing. Or at least, the nuance that had been eluding me up until that time. The nuance many lawyers miss when admonished to "show not tell." All writing seeks to convey clarity. But the methods vary. In this context, the nuance I'm referring to is the distinction between… Continue reading

Dancing With the Madman

Bryan Garner's recommendation of the Flowers Writing Paradigm would have significantly shortened my learning curve if I'd known about it. Maybe my recommendation now can serve you as Garner's would have served me. Dr. Betty S. Flowers, Garner reports, devised a shrewd way of dramatizing the process to minimize problems and maximize efficiency as well as effectiveness. The most important news here is that the process works. And not… Continue reading

Legal Writing: Who’s Your Audience? What’s Your Goal?

Legal writing is a highly specialized art form that should be employed only when it can't be avoided. Every audience will appreciate your adherence to a simple plan: never use highly technical writing techniques when more reader friendly versions will do the job (and be more effective in the process). This is a good rule for all technical professionals. Doctors, pharmacists, engineers, marketers, human relations experts, and rocket scientists. I'm not simply… Continue reading

The Business of Publishing is Your Oyster

Publishing opportunities for prose in all its forms have never been greater.  We'll talk about the ones I've used personally and the ones I'm aware of, and answer questions you might have about the various types of publishing, if you like.
The main thing to understand is that if you want to write and publish something other than what your law practice requires in the course of

Witness for the Prosecution: Guilty of Innocent Lies

Reading and writing are like breathing to me, impossible to live without. I don't remember the first book I ever read on my own, but I do remember my parents reading to me as a child. Maybe that's where it started. I recall trips to the library to choose and return books long before I began attending school, and for years thereafter. As a youngster, my dad would tell me… Continue reading