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Escaping Into the Open: The Art of Writing True by Elizabeth Berg
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Escaping Into the Open: The Art of Writing True

by Elizabeth Berg

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198429,373 (3.6)3
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Harper Perennial (2000), Paperback, 240 pages

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Entertaining, educational and chock full of practical, useful and inspiring exercises for the pen (or keyboard) ( )
  illuminatedliterati | Mar 24, 2009 |
I love Elizabeth Berg's stories, so naturally I enjoy reading about her techniques for getting at the best writing within herself. She includes many fun & effective exercises for becoming better, more perceptive writers. ( )
  truesally | Mar 18, 2007 |
How would you like a ZILLION (roughly) creative writing exercises? This is a fun book. Gotta go--I have to write a sexy scene that takes place in a laundry room and then name three things an ear looks like... ( )
  ChuckB | Dec 3, 2006 |
If you're a non-fiction writer and you're thinking of attempting fiction or creative non-fiction, this is the book for you. It will give you the courage to try new forms of writing. It's a wonderful, life-changing book -- or at least it was for me.
  anndouglas | Nov 1, 2005 |
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Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0060929294, Paperback)

Elizabeth Berg (Talk Before Sleep) is a can-do kid. Forget the common wisdom--that writing is difficult and getting published nearly impossible without contacts or an agent. "What you need most," she says, "is a fierce desire to put things down on paper." And if a gentle nudge will help you on your way, well, Berg wishes to provide just that, cheerfully, with Escaping into the Open. For Berg, writing--and success--comes easily. In fact, she says, "What I like doing best is writing.... I feel like a drug addict with an exceptionally wise drug of choice."

It is refreshing to come across a book so positive and friendly--even if a there is a little too much emphasis on the author's own experience (did she really have to include a five-page essay by an envious friend and three pages of topics about which she herself has successfully written?). Still, how could one not appreciate a writing guide that espouses napping, eating chocolate-covered cherries, and standing by your "man(uscript)," and that likens passionate, risky writing--the only kind that's worth anything--to great sex? Berg encourages her reader to look (and listen and feel) deeply, to learn from children, and not to let life interfere with writing any more than it has to. She addresses--sometimes with help from her friends--writing classes, writing groups, and the writing life. In a chapter called "If you're a man, be a woman," she offers up 30 pages of writing exercises. Berg is personable, whimsical, amazed by her good fortune, and direct. "There's only one person who can stop you," she says gravely at book's end, "and we both know who that is." --Jane Steinberg

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:55 -0400)

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