Life in progress

JusJoJan 13 – What Blogging has Taught Me About Subtracting

33 Comments

From this:

With the door closed it was very quiet in the room apart from the sound of birds cooing. Herman went to the window in search of the source. A line of tall, thick trees at the perimeter of a vast lawn surrounded the house. Daffodils and tulips poked up through the soil as close to the house as she could see without putting her forehead against the glass. Beyond the garden a cobblestone walkway, wide enough for two people to stroll side by side wound it’s way past a patio sat off to the left. To the right was a small brick building with six or eight sides, she couldn’t really tell from her vantage point. It was made of the same colour brick as the house and had many small windows near the top. It looked to be about two stories high. A shed, or a coop perhaps. She turned her back to the window see if the room appeared as domestically normal as the garden. The walls were paneled with dark wood and the furniture was antique, upholstered with red velvet. Along one wall, to her right, either side of the door hung pictures of landscapes rather than family portraits. The wall opposite the door was covered in fragrantly old books. A computer with a the large flat screen perched upon a heavy ancient-looking desk was the only evidence that she hadn’t stepped back in time.

To this:

The sound of birds cooing beckoned Herman to the window in search of the source. A protective line of tall, thick pines stood like sentries around at the perimeter of a vast lawn, and daffodils and tulips poked their heads up through the soil as close to the house as she could see. Beyond the flower garden a cobblestone walkway, wide enough for two people to stroll side by side wound it’s way past a patio off to the left. To the right stood a small red brick building with six or eight sides and a dozen small windows near the top that reflected the gloomy April sky. A shed, or a coop perhaps. She turned her back on the peaceful scenery outside, to see if the room appeared as domestically serene as the garden. The dark paneled walls were adorned either with painted landscapes or covered in bookshelves containing fragrantly old books, lending the student in her warm comfort. A computer with a the large flat screen perched upon a heavy ancient-looking desk was the only evidence that she hadn’t stepped back in time.

Above is first the original NaNo 2011 version of the beginning of Chapter 5 of my manuscript, and second is what I edited it down to this morning. What do you think?

I see this as the result of two years writing experience and endless blog posts which have forced me to write to be publicly read. I see this as the result of two very wonderful people who have critiqued my work and told me in no uncertain terms that I have to put the character in my descriptions. (Thank you so much, Janice and Connie. Honest critique is the most valuable thing a writer can receive.)

In all, I see the second version as something that a publisher might actually look at. But that was one paragraph out of 524 pages.

Back to work!

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Unknown's avatar

Author: Linda G. Hill

There's a writer in here, clawing her way out.

33 thoughts on “JusJoJan 13 – What Blogging has Taught Me About Subtracting

  1. Marie A Bailey's avatar

    The paragraphs are so similar, yet the 2nd one is more active. It pulls me in right away, and makes me want to read more 🙂

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  2. navigator1965's avatar

    I think it reflects better on the author is she or he can achieve a similar or better effect in fewer words, as the writing is clearly more poignant. Well done, Linda.

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  3. joey's avatar

    I like the description in the first, but it is passive, so the second one is immediately more intriguing, with Herman being beckoned. I want to read more about Herman.
    Please fix the it’s/its.

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  4. Priceless Joy's avatar

    Caannoty leave a comment this is wwhat it does. I willl try.. I like the second!

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  5. Paul Davis's avatar

    Haha it really is amazing how our writing changes when we do it regularly. I’m finding the same results. Very cool use of complex imagery in the second one.

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  6. hannaplummer's avatar

    Excellent editing done to beautiful prose. Can’t wait to see your full, final copy! 🙂

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  7. Pingback: JusJoJan 13 – What Blogging has Taught Me About Subtracting | hannaplummer

  8. KG's avatar

    I had to actually read them thrice and I liked the 2nd one 🙂

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  9. Myas's avatar

    I am still ‘weed hopper’ in all this. I humbly take notes. 🙂

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    • Linda G. Hill's avatar

      Somehow I don’t see you as a ‘weed hopper.’ Haha.
      I think what surprises me the most is how much I’ve learned through just blogging without having realized I’ve learned it. I’ve done a lot of experimenting here, especially with the series I wrote when I first started. It’s paid off. 🙂

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      • Myas's avatar

        Yes, andfrom posting on different sites as to how everyone’s reacting.

        My grandson beckons… he’s turning into ‘a raisin in the tub’. Maybe now he wants out and to be rehydrated with baby lotion… 🙂 Funny how that works although can you imagine how we’d be if we absorbed water… there’d be no room in the pool – but there’d also be no need to buy floats.

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