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Author - Lee Gutkind ... [Goo?] [Posters]This Paperback Book item from Wiley was reviewed on 26-Oct-2008. Search ISBN:0471113565 offer from Abebooks or used books from Alibris. The Art of Creative Nonfiction: Writing and Selling the Literature of Reality (Wiley Books for Writers Series) Reference Book. Classifications : All Amazon Upgrade Amazon Upgrade Custom Stores Specialty Stores Books Arts & Photography Amazon Upgrade Custom Stores Specialty Stores Books Literature & Fiction Amazon Upgrade Custom Stores Specialt . Click the following link to view the cover of The Art of Creative Nonfiction: Writing and Selling the Literature of Reality (Wiley Books for Writers Series). Related topics: All Amazon Upgrade. Amazon Upgrade. Custom Stores. Specialty Stores. Books. Arts & Photography. Amazon Upgrade. Custom Stores. Specialty Stores. Books. requestid: a5b603ef-b4c5-4206-b130-ef332e381413requestprocessingtime: 0.1136930000000000 salesrank: 85068 numberofitems: 1 packagedimensions: 7189044598 1) Paperback Book The Art of Creative Nonfiction: Writing and Selling the Literature of Reality (Wiley Books for Writers Series) by Wiley. Lee Gutkind did justice to this book. Almost every advice you would need to help you write good essays, books articles,etc. My writing skills have tremendously improved after i read this book.The Art of Creative Nonfiction: Writing and Selling the Literature of Reality (Wiley Books for Writers Series)¤ 2) Paperback Book The Art of Creative Nonfiction: Writing and Selling the Literature of Reality (Wiley Books for Writers Series) by Wiley. I am using this book for a class on literary journalism. To be frank, there aren´t a lot of choices out there for this class--there´s a lot of the other kind of ´creative nonfiction´ stuff--memoir, personal writing, etc. I like that stuff too, but I´m trying to draw the Journalistic Line, here. This book is one of the few choices there are for my purposes, but I can see why--who could write a book much better than this? This is the Gold Standard as far as I´m concerned.
3) Paperback Book The Art of Creative Nonfiction: Writing and Selling the Literature of Reality (Wiley Books for Writers Series) by Wiley. A clown for Ringling Brothers, an assistant in liver and heart transplantation surgeries, a baseball umpire, a motorcyclist and a participant in psychotherapy: When it comes to having the experience necessary to write interesting essays, Lee Gutkind is ahead of the game. In his textbook "The Art of Creative Nonfiction : Writing and Selling the Literature of Reality," Gutkind uses his passion for the written word and the experiences that inspire it to assist beginning creative nonfiction writers in their quest to share life through writing. Covered in the book´s outline-reminiscent chapters are instructions on interviewing, fact checking, finding ideas, creating dialogue and keeping story files. Straying from the norm of "interesting... [and] accurate," Gutkind stresses that the most important requirement of a creative nonfiction writer is passion- "A passion for the written word, a passion for the search and discovery of knowledge, and a passion for... understand[ing] intimately how things in this world work." In the following chapters, he offers advice on what creative nonfiction is (the relation experiences, often subjective) and is not (encyclopedia truth) in a concise yet affable manner. Peppered with brief works from other writers used as illustrations of his suggestions, "The Art of Creative Nonfiction" is a solid, friendly text for beginning writers and an excellent stepping stone into the world of writing for a career.¤ 4) Paperback Book The Art of Creative Nonfiction: Writing and Selling the Literature of Reality (Wiley Books for Writers Series) by Wiley. This book reads like an outline of a book on Creative Nonfiction. A beginner might find some chapters useful or inspiring, but anyone with writing experience is likely to find it too shallow. The chapter on Immersion--one of the key methods of reporting a highly detailed, creative story--is only 8 pages long, gives a few anecdotes, but provides next to no useful information to a writer contemplating this technique. The following chapter, on interviewing, is 10 pages long and more than half of it is composed of long excerpts from other stories. You might see the _results_ of doing a good interview, but not much beyond the obvious in actually carrying out a good interview. This book doesn´t stand out for me among the large number of mediocre books aimed at beginning to intermediate nonfiction writers.¤ 5) Paperback Book The Art of Creative Nonfiction: Writing and Selling the Literature of Reality (Wiley Books for Writers Series) by Wiley. Initially I was afraid to invest hard cash on this book because I want my nonfiction to be totally factual. However, my fears were unfounded. This book was well worth the investment and I recommend it to all aspiring writers of nonfiction. The book is a tremendous eye-opener. It blows the myth that nonfiction writing has to be dull. Dull does not sell. If you are writing nonfiction, you need to read this book. For one thing, the author teaches that the words "creative" and "fiction" are not synonymous. You CAN write creative nonfiction.¤ 6) Paperback Book The Art of Creative Nonfiction: Writing and Selling the Literature of Reality (Wiley Books for Writers Series) by Wiley. A complete guide to the art and craft of creative nonfiction--from one of its pioneer practitioners 7) Paperback Book The Art of Creative Nonfiction: Writing and Selling the Literature of Reality (Wiley Books for Writers Series) by Wiley. This book is for the beginning creative nonfiction writer--one who needs to be told that writers are an eccentric lot; one who has never heard of the Yaddo artists´ colony. Still, Lee Gutkind, the author of several books of creative nonfiction and the founder/editor of the journal Creative Nonfiction, has some interesting things to tell us about this genre of writing, which strives to communicate real-life stories dramatically. The most important quality that a creative nonfiction writer can have, writes Gutkind, is passion: "A passion for the written word; a passion for the search and discovery of knowledge; and a passion for ... understand[ing] intimately how things in this world work." Gutkind offers instruction on finding story ideas, focusing one´s work, keeping story files, fact checking, and interviewing; he tells us what to expect from editors and agents; and he teaches us how to know when we´re ready to start writing (when you can "think of nothing more to ask or to learn"). Perhaps the best tidbit here is Gutkind´s emphasis on delving deeply into one´s subject matter without inserting oneself into the situation. "While immersing myself in a writing project," he says, "I routinely like to compare myself to a rather undistinguished and utilitarian end table in a living room or office. It is a fixture. You walk in and out of your living room dozens of times a day. You see the table, you expect to see the table, but you do not say, ´Well, there is the table, hello table.´" Appendices include a sample book proposal and readings.¤ Page Updated: Robert N. Goolsby, 23-Nov-2008, 04711135659780471113560, 860-590-550-530-650-971-051-8
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