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Your choice of words could |
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Two manuscripts arrive on a busy editor’s desk. They are twins—in subject matter, theme, and the basic story they tell. Yet one manuscript is quickly rejected. The other makes it all the way through the editor’s review process, to publication. . . . |
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Dear Writer, What’s the difference between the two manuscripts cited above? It is the one factor that keeps them from being identical twins. Think of it as WORD MAGIC. The first manuscript was well researched, clearly written, solidly structured. However, the writer of the second manuscript knew how to inject the kind of originality, flair, and expressive richness and sharpness into submitted work that made it grab and hold editorial interest all the way to publication. That author had WORD MAGIC. Now you can have it, too—or greatly increase the amount you already have—from a single authoritative new source: WORD MAGIC
FOR WRITERS Here, finally, is a fascinating book that clearly shows you how to boost the success potential of your writing project, whether an article, speech, story, book, play, or advertising, by elevating and energizing—charging up—the language in which it is written. From this one source, you’ll discover how to craft beginnings that hook the reader, middles that compel him or her to stay on the hook, dialogue and descriptions that sizzle and enchant, and endings that leave the reader eager to read more of your work. WORD MAGIC will help you accomplish all this through dozens of proven language devices and secrets that successful authors use to lift their writing from the ordinary to the extraordinary. Some of these techniques you may already be using instinctively without knowing their complete value. WORD MAGIC will bring you full knowledge of what they are, how and why they work, and how to apply them toward the greater fulfillment and success of your own writing. Sound
Devices That Tickle a Title When Dickens described Scrooge as “. . . secret, and self-contained and solitary as an oyster,” he was using alliteration—beginning successive words with the same consonant sound—to give the description a decisive energy. Alliteration can bring a character entertainingly and accurately to life, as in Richard Peck’s “Well, I'm an old sod-bustin’ son of the soil . . . got more toes than teeth” and Lauren Slater’s vivid description in Harper’s Magazine of a plastic surgeon “speeding toward the hospital where he reconstructs faces, appends limbs, puffs and preens the female form.” In the first section of WORD MAGIC FOR WRITERS, you’ll be delighted and stimulated by scintillating examples of alliteration and other proven sound devices that enable leading authors, journalists, and writers of every stripe to entice, involve, and hold their readers all the way. “In
Xanadu did Kubla Khan You’ll feast on examples like this of assonance where internal vowel repetition works its rhythmic magic . . . to assonance combined with consonance, as in “The glimmer of gold, the shimmer of silver” . . . to the wheezes, fizzes, growls, and screeches of that glorious mouthful of a word, onomatopoeia, which names a thing or action by the sound associated with it, as in Leif Enger’s “the chuffs and growls of plow trucks” . . . and Poe’s “the tintinnabulation that so musically wells from the bells, bells, bells, bells, bells. . . .” Striking sound device examples and challenging, fun-filled exercises show you how to tickle your titles into intriguing hooks, and make your sentences snap and pop right up into your reader’s stirred-up imagination and eagerness to keep your pages turning: “To
fulfill a dream, to be allowed to sweat over That’s a sentiment all
writers share. Its also an excellent example of the use of
metaphor, one of a writer’s most powerful tools, great for
enhancing and clarifying your work. “She
stood in front of the altar, This striking image by poet
Maya Angelou plunges you into the lively world of the simile,
another WORD MAGIC FOR WRITERS tool available to
you for creating vivid descriptions. “January
slipped an icy finger This shivery quote from a novel by Jerry Spinelli brings you to personification, in which you give an object, an idea, or a force of nature human characteristics. Author Cindy Rogers shows you
many ways to add dramatic force, humor, and mood enhancement to your
work by personifying trees, roads, snow, animals, even kindness, as
in Naomi Shihab Nye’s “It is only kindness that ties your shoes
. . . that raises its head from the crowd of the world . . . and
then goes with you everywhere.” |
Cindy
Rogers is a teacher, an editor, and the author of three books and
more than 100 stories, plays, articles, essays, profiles, and word
conundrums. Her most recent book, Word Magic for Writers,
is the result of several years of research on the richness and
subtleties of the English language. Numerous articles and columns on
the use of language and writing have been published in Writer’s
Digest, Children’s Writer, and Magazine Markets
for Children's Writers.Ms. Rogers’ educational pieces have been published in Good Apple Newspaper, Educational Oasis, Parents of Teenagers and excerpts of her work have been used in testing materials by Harcourt Brace, McGraw Hill, SIRS, and Exploring English. |
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“Where’s Papa going with that ax?” What child—or parent—could resist reading beyond this opening line from E. B. White’s Charlotte’s Web? WORD MAGIC FOR WRITERS uses analyses of examples like this of first lines, titles, and final paragraphs to increase your ability to grab the reader’s attention at the start—keep him on the hook—and turn him into a fan at the end. “Jean! Get up! Dress! Eat!” That’s a bit of brachyology, the use of staccato dialogue to show a hurried, harried character. You’ll meet and master dozens of other such fascinating word magic tricks that successful writers use to expand vividly, accentuate, and enliven a scene or an idea, from assonance and analogy to . . . “. . .
opened the door and her heart That’s a bit of zeugma,
the use of a single word to modify two or more other words in
different ways. WORD MAGIC FOR WRITERS delivers to
you more brilliant examples and clear definitions of
language-enhancing devices than any other book in print. |
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Discover for yourself
what the experts “Written with enthusiasm and laced with an abundance of appropriate examples from both adult and children’s literature, WORD MAGIC FOR WRITERS makes a valuable addition to any writer’s home library.” —James Cross Giblin,
former Editor-in-Chief at Clarion Books for 22 years “This book is full of fascinating writing techniques, many of which were new to me. It will be as indispensable to a word lover as a hardware store is to a tool lover.” —Marileta Robinson, Senior Editor of Highlights for Children magazine “Any student of writing would profit from reading WORD MAGIC FOR WRITERS. The rewards include a refined ear for language, a broader and more conscious choice of strategies, and (not least) the pleasures of Cindy Rogers’ wit.” —Jane Resh Thomas,
author of a dozen books, including the |
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FREE EXAMINATION |
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Enjoy WORD MAGIC FOR WRITERS for 30 days. Use it to start putting magic into your own writing. If you don’t agree that it is everything we have promised, simply return the book to us and we’ll refund the full purchase price you paid.
No questions asked. No hassles. Guaranteed.
If you’d like to receive WORD MAGIC FOR WRITERS for a 30-day, no-risk examination; simply complete the order form today. Just click on Order Now. |
| Cordially,
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P.S. |
See for yourself why Kate DiCamillo, author of Tale of Despereaux, the Newbery Medal Winner, 2004, and Because of Winn-Dixie, a Newbery Honor book, 2000, says “WORD MAGIC FOR WRITERS is a writing book like no other . . . joyful, exuberant, witty and wise. It manages to be many things at once: a celebration of language, an examination of its mysteries, and an invitation for writers of every ilk to pick up their pens and join the party. Wonderful.” |