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Loading... The Art of Fiction: A Guide for Writers and Readersby Ayn Rand
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. A great book on how to write good fiction. I would highly recommend it to anyone interested in writing. It's also very easy to read. ( )I have quite a few books by popular authors on how to write (Stephen King, Terry Brooks, etc.) but of all of the ones I've read this one is the best and most helpful. Whereas most authors tell you "Well, there's not really any rules to writing" and then toss out a few breadcrumbs of their own process in a disorganized manner, Ayn Rand lays everything out objectively, covering topics as varied as how to find inspiration and get over writer's block to the actual structure and process of putting a story together, to the development of individual style. What's even more amazing, however, is that Ayn Rand did not write this book per se. Although all of the ideas and words are hers they are transcribed from a seminar that was recorded on cassette and edited later. From having read a number of Rand's other works I would have to say that the editor did a marvelous job; if I did not know beforehand that the book wasn't written by Rand I would not have discovered it simply from reading it. Unfortunately this also happens to be the book on writing most discriminated against. For instance, I have seen people criticize it because Rand references her own works as examples, yet I have yet to see anyone criticize Stephen King or any other modern author for doing the same. To me it is only logical that a highly acclaimed author would reference their own works when talking about how to write fiction. After all, isn't that why you buy a book by a given author to begin with, because you like how they write and want to know their own thoughts on their own writing? Therefore my advice would be to read this book and compare it to other authors' books on writing and see for yourself. The worst that could happen would be for you to end up writing two best-selling novels that stay in print for 50 years and are considered among the most influential novels ever written in English. no reviews | add a review
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It is hard to be ambivalent about Ayn Rand. Rand spoke in absolutes, and either you buy it or you don't. There is plenty of fiber and nutritious material in this book, but the Rand agnostic may find it hard to digest. Rand's ego is enormous and her dismissiveness petty most every step of the way. "In regard to precision of language," says Rand, who uses her work throughout the book to exemplify her points, "I think I myself am the best writer today." But woe to any other author, excluding Victor Hugo, Mickey Spillane, and, with reservations, Dostoyevsky. "To see how not to write," advises Rand, "read [Thomas Wolfe's] descriptive passages." Sinclair Lewis, she says, is a "perceptive but superficial observer." James Joyce? "He is worse than Gertrude Stein. ...He uses words from different languages, makes up some words of his own, and calls that literature."
Still, Rand does have some useful things to say to the fiction writer. Perhaps most important is her emphatic belief in the concrete. "In order to be completely free with words," she intones, "you must know countless concretes under your abstractions." It is only the concrete, she adds, that will lead the reader to your abstractions, your themes. Along related lines, Rand believes firmly that "If a writer feels that he was unable fully to express what he wanted to express, it means that he did not know clearly what he wanted to express"--no more blaming it on writer's block for you! And remember: "A good style is one that conveys the most with the greatest economy of words." This means that "when you draw a character, everything that you say about him acquires significance by the mere fact of being included in your story." The bottom line is that "Art is selectivity." --Jane Steinberg
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:12 -0400)
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