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LEADER: 11473cam 2200649 a 4500
001 ocm85833282
003 OCoLC
005 20220404220014.0
008 070223s2007 nyu bf 001 0 eng
010 $a 2007008030
040 $aDLC$beng$cDLC$dYDX$dBAKER$dBTCTA$dNPL$dJED$dYDXCP$dVP@$dOMB$dOCLCG$dNOR$dSMP$dCQU$dLF8$dVOV$dOCLCQ$dBDX$dOCLCF$dOCLCA$dOCLCQ$dOCLCO$dOCL$dSFR$dOCLCQ$dRB0$dOCL$dOCLCO$dQQ3$dCPO$dOCLCO
019 $a1022712073
020 $a9780393061642$q(hardcover)
020 $a0393061647$q(hardcover)
020 $a9780393337082$q(pbk.)
020 $a0393337081$q(pbk.)
035 $a(OCoLC)85833282$z(OCoLC)1022712073
050 00 $aPE1408$b.L31887 2007
082 00 $a808/.042$222
100 1 $aLaPlante, Alice,$d1958-
245 14 $aThe making of a story :$ba Norton guide to creative writing /$cAlice LaPlante.
250 $a1st ed.
260 $aNew York :$bW.W. Norton,$c©2007.
300 $a677 pages ;$c25 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
338 $avolume$bnc$2rdacarrier
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 647-655) and index.
505 00 $tAcknowledgments --$gch.1.$tWhat is this thing called creative writing? --$gpt. 1.$tThe basics --$tGetting started --$tReconciling the method with the madness --$tSome basic definitions --$tCreative nonfiction : a working definition --$tWriting that is surprising yet convincing --$tResisting paraphrase --$tCreative nonfiction : capturing what has eluded capture --$tOn sentiment and sentimentality --$tOur first job as writers : to notice --$tAvoiding the "writerly" voice --$gpt. 2.$tExercises --$tExercise 1 : "I don't know why I remember ..." --$tExercise 2 : I am a camera --$gpt. 3.$tReading as a writer --$t"On keeping a notebook" /$rJoan Didion ---$t"Emergency" /$rDenis Johnson --$gch. 2.$tThe splendid gift of not knowing --$gpt. 1.$tWriting as discovery --$tGetting started --$tWhat do you know? --$tCreative nonfiction : making the ordinary extraordinary --$tWriting down what you don't know (about what you know) --$tOn rendering, not solving, the mysteries that surround us --$tMoving from "triggering" to real subject --$tSurprise yourself, interest others --$tObsession as a creative virtue --$gpt. 2.$tExercises --$tExercise 1 : Things I was taught/things I was not taught --$tExercise 2 : I want to know why --$gpt. 3.$tReading as a writer --$t"Where are you going, where have you been?" /$rJoyce Carol Oates --$t"Welcome to cancerland" /$rBarbara Ehrenreich.
505 00 $gch. 3.$tDetails, details --$gpt. 1.$tConcrete details as the basic building blocks of good creative writing --$tGetting started --$tOn thinking small --$tDefining "images" within a literary context --$tImagery that works on two levels --$tOn seeing the general in the particular --$tOn crowding the reader out of his own space --$tDon't lose any of your senses --$tUse of concrete details in creative nonfiction --$tUse and abuse of metaphor --$tWhen should you use metaphor? --$tAvoiding the "S" word : banishing conscious symbols from your writing --$tImagery as creative source --$gpt. 2.$tExercises --$tExercise 1 : Harper's Index on a personal level --$tExercise 2 : Render a tree, capture the forest --$gpt. 3.$tReading as a writer --$g"The$tthings they carried" /$rTim O'Brien --$t"Nebraska" /$rRon Hansen.
505 00 $gch. 4.$tThe shapely story --$gpt. 1.$tDefining the short story --$tGetting started --$tSome basic definitions --$tThe conflict-crisis-resolution model --$tLinear vs. modular stories --$tTo epiphany or not to epiphany? --$tIs change necessary? (the debate continues) --$tOn not becoming slaves to theory --$gpt. 2.$tExercises --$tExercise 1 : False epiphanies I have had --$tExercise 2 : Opportunities not taken --$gpt. 3.$tReading as a writer --$t"What makes a short story?" /$rFrancine Prose --$t"Helping" /$rRobert Stone --$gch. 5.$tWhy you need to show and tell --$gpt. 1.$tThe importance of narration --$tGetting started --$tSome basic definitions --$tWhy "show not tell" is such common advice --$tThe show-and-tell balancing act --$tTraditional uses of narration (telling) --$tWhy narration is such an important creative tool --$tHow showing and telling complement each other --$tGood intentions, bad advice --$tThe showing-telling continuum --$tShowing and telling in creative nonfiction --$gpt. 2.$tExercises --$tExercise 1 : Tell me a story --$tExercise 2 : What everyone knows/What I know --$gpt. 3.$tReading as a writer --$t"Brownies" /$rZZ Packer --$t"Winner take nothing" /$rBernard Cooper.
505 00 $gch. 6.$tWho's telling this story, anyway? --$gpt. 1.$tIntroduction to point of view --$tGetting started --$tSome basic definitions --$tFirst person --$tWhose story is it? --$tSecond person --$tThird person --$tA word about attitude --$tDistance and point of view --$tShifts in narrative distance --$tChoosing a point of view for your creative work --$tPoint of view and creative nonfiction --$tCommon point of view problems --$gpt. 2.$tExercises --$tExercise 1 : Change point of view and dance --$tExercise 2 : Using point of view as a way "in" to difficult material --$gpt. 3.$tReading as a writer --$g"The$tlady with the little dog" /$rAnton Chekhov --$t"Moonrise" /$rPenny Wolfson --$gch. 7.$tHow reliable is this narrator? --$gpt. 1.$tHow point of view affects our understanding of a story --$tGetting started --$tHow we judge the integrity of the stories we hear and read --$tFirst person point of view and reliability --$tThird person point of view and reliability --$gpt. 2.$tExercises --$tExercise 1 : He said, she said --$tExercise 2 : See what I see, hear what I hear --$gpt. 3.$tReading as a writer --$g"The$tswimmer" /$rJohn Cheever --$gch. 8.$tYou talking to me? --$gpt. 1.$tCrafting effective dialogue --$tGetting started --$tWhat dialogue is good for --$tWhat dialogue is not --$tA word about attribution --$tFive important tips on dialogue --$tOn subtext --$tA word about dialect --$tUsing placeholders --$tDialogue in creative nonfiction --$gpt. 2.$tExercises --$tExercise 1 : Nonverbal communication --$tExercise 2 : Them's fighting words --$gpt. 3.$tReading as a writer --$t"Hills like white elephants" /$rErnest Hemingway --$t"Inside the bunker" /$rJohn Sack.
505 00 $gch. 9.$tThe plot thickens --$gpt. 1.$tFiguring out what happens next --$tGetting started --$tStory vs. plot : some basic definitions --$tA word about causality --$tRender how -- don't try to answer why --$tOn metafiction --$tCharacter-based plotting --$tOn conflict --$tAnalyzing plot points --$tAvoiding Scènes à Faire : recognizing clichéd plot twists --$gpt. 2.$tExercises --$tExercise 1 : What's behind the door of room 101? --$tExercise 2 : "By the time you read this ..." --$gpt. 3.$tReading as a writer --$t"Sonny's blues" /$rJames Baldwin --$gch. 10.$tRecognizable people --$gpt. 1.$tCreating surprising-yet-convincing characters --$tGetting started --$tFlat vs. round characters --$tEschewing the general in favor of the particular --$tConsistency as the hobgoblin of characters --$tWays of defining character --$tCharacter and plot --$tWants and needs --$tCharacters in relationships --$tCharacter in creative nonfiction --$gpt. 2.$tExercises --$tExercise 1 : Emptying pockets --$tExercise 2 : Sins of commissions/Sins of omission --$tExercise 3 : Seven or eight things I know about him/her --$gpt. 3.$tReading as a writer --$t"Surrounded by sleep" /$rAkhil Sharma --$t"No name woman" /$rMaxine Hong Kingston.
505 00 $gch. 11.$tRaising the curtain --$gpt. 1.$tBeginning your story, novel, or nonfiction piece --$tGetting started --$tYour contract with the reader --$tCharacteristics of a good opening --$tUnbalancing acts --$tStarting in the middle --$tBeginning with action --$tOn the nature of suspense --$tBeginning your creative nonfiction piece --$gpt. 2.$tExercises --$tExercise 1 : Give it your best shot --$tExercise 2 : Start in the middle --$tExercise 3 : Make them squirm --$gpt. 3.$tReading as a writer --$t"People like that are the only people here : canonical babbling in Peed Onk" /$rLorrie Moore --$gch. 12.$tWhat's this creative work really about? --$gpt. 1.$tThe art of transferring true emotions onto sensory events --$tGetting started --$tMany different answers to the same question --$tWriting about what matters --$tTransference : borrowing from Freud --$tWe are made of dust --$tThe road to universality --$tBut it's the truth! and other common pleas for clemency --$tCreative nonfiction : on being true as well as factual --$tMaking things carry more emotional weight than they logically should --$tTransference and creative nonfiction --$gpt. 2.$tExercises --$tExercise 1 : Getting an image to spill its secrets --$tExercise 2 : What I lost --$gpt. 3.$tReading as a writer --$t"Ralph the duck" /$rFrederick Busch --$g"The$tknife" /$rRichard Selzer.
505 00 $gch. 13.$tLearning to fail better --$gpt. 1.$tOn revision --$tGetting started --$tAdvice for writers from writers --$tPerfection is our enemy --$tThe workshop method --$tUndue influence : a cautionary tale --$tThe developmental stages of a creative work --$t"Hot spots" and other noteworthy aspects of an early draft --$tAn exercise-based approach to deep revision --$tA word about constraints --$gpt. 2.$tExercises --$tAnalytical/mechanical exercises --$tCreative exercises --$tResearch-based exercises --$tChance-based exercises --$tRevision example : "The company of men" /$rJan Ellison --$gpt. 3.$tReading as a writer --$t"Shitty first drafts" /$rAnne Lamott --$g"The$tCarver chronicles" /$rD.T. Max --$g"The$tbath" /$rRaymond Carver --$g"A$tsmall, good thing" /$rRaymond Carver --$gch. 14.$tGetting beyond facts to truth --$gpt. 1.$tSome final thoughts on creative nonfiction --$tGetting started --$tJust the facts, ma'am --$tRecollections and re-creations --$tEthical considerations --$tSubjectivity vs. objectivity --$tA trip of self-discovery --$tTo be in or out of the story? --$gpt. 2.$tReading as a writer --$t"Learning to drive" /$rKatha Pollitt --$tGlossary--$tBibliography --$tList of stories --$tPermissions --$tIndex.
520 $aA guide to creative writing that introduces readers to each stage of the creative writing process and helps them build their writing skills through exercises and real-life examples.
650 0 $aEnglish language$xRhetoric$vHandbooks, manuals, etc.
650 0 $aEnglish language$xStyle$vHandbooks, manuals, etc.
650 0 $aCreative writing$vHandbooks, manuals, etc.
650 0 $aReport writing$vHandbooks, manuals, etc.
650 7 $aCreative writing.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst00882489
650 7 $aEnglish language$xRhetoric.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst00911581
650 7 $aEnglish language$xStyle.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst00911825
650 7 $aReport writing.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01094836
655 7 $aLiterature.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01921716
655 7 $aHandbooks and manuals.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01423877
655 7 $aLiterature.$2lcgft
655 4 $aNonfiction.
856 41 $3Table of contents$uhttp://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0712/2007008030.html
938 $aBaker & Taylor$bBKTY$c29.95$d22.46$i0393061647$n0006803609$sactive
938 $aBrodart$bBROD$n05504767$c$29.95
938 $aBaker and Taylor$bBTCP$n2007008030
938 $aYBP Library Services$bYANK$n2437768
029 1 $aAU@$b000041340629
029 1 $aNZ1$b11283897
994 $aZ0$bP4A
948 $hNO HOLDINGS IN P4A - 977 OTHER HOLDINGS