Sunday, October 22, 2017

Blog #8

The example I found is a paragraph from a short story titled, “Zebra,” by Chaim Potok. This is the first part of the story and it uses many of the suggestions from chapter 10 from “When Worlds Collide.”
One of the suggestions this excerpt demonstrates is liveliness. “When Worlds Collide” says that liveliness is “…composition that moves along at a good clip, involving readers or listeners and carrying them briskly from paragraph to paragraph.” I think this story is a great example of liveliness. I think it captures the reader and moves them from paragraph to paragraph. Taking this idea even further, I think the story carries the reader from word to word with its details and imagery.
Another suggestion this excerpt exemplifies is using descriptive detail. The sentence, “…he saw zebras, hundreds of them, thundering across a grassy plan, dust rising boiling brown clouds” is proof of this. The detail in the adjectives and words helps the reader visualize what the author of the story is talking about.

The editing mistake I found this week was from a Facebook comment and it has two editing errors. The first mistake is that the author wrote “2” instead of “two.” The AP rule on numbers is that numbers under 10 should be spelled out. The second mistake I see in this comment is the first comma after “sorry.” I think it would make more sense if this statement read, “Sorry to post 2, but as they say...”.

3 comments:

  1. I love the example that you found of liveliness! That's the same rule that I highlighted in my post. I've realized that liveliness is one of the most important elements of writing to me. It really makes a book worth reading. Thanks for the post!

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  2. Good catch on the word "2" and "two." That is something that I can work on more, sometimes I get typing too fast!

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  3. That passage is a great example of liveliness. I read a book called “The Chosen” by the same author. He is very good at using descriptive details.

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