picture-perfect

Product Placement
occasionally subtle

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Sade Olutola
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
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izzy's playlists!
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

oozey mess
tumblr dot com

if i look back, i am lost

romaβ

#extradirty

Love Begins

shark vs the universe
Noah Kahan
One Nice Bug Per Day
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π©΅ avery cochrane π©΅
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@writes-in-the-shower
picture-perfect
Aisha Hinds as Henrietta "Hen" Wilson 9-1-1, S08E16
@writes-in-the-shower
So, so many works Iβve read could be vastly improved with tightening and shaving of superfluous words. Wordiness is an easy stumbling block, as weβre used to how we talk. Weβre used to how others (long ago) wrote. But times change, my friend, and so do expectations of the writer. We donβt get paid by the word in fiction. So show your smarts and say as much as you can with as much power as you can in as few words as possible.
Here are a few things you can cut without reserve to help shorten your story right now. And as you catch yourself using these words in your next draft, hit that backspace before you finish the sentence! Itβs okay if you already have. You can go delete them now. No one will ever know.
Moment/Second/Minute
Itβs so tempting. I am guilty of using this word like fertilizer in my first drafts. But most of the time, these words arenβt needed at all. They add nothing.
He sat down for a moment, sipping his coffee. vs. He sat down and sipped at his coffee.
But he only did it for a moment, you say!
He sat down for a moment, sipping his coffee. When the door opened a second later, he shot to his feet. vs. He sat down and sipped his coffee. The door opened, and before he could swallow his first sip, he shot to his feet.
I know, this is about making your writing more concise and my βrightβ example has more words than the first example. But whatβs the difference? The words used in the second sentence are more tangible. They give a visual that βa second laterβ and βfor a momentβ donβt. And you could leave that part out, of course, if youβre really going for trimming word count. It doesnβt paint quite the same image, but βThe door opened and he shot to his feet.β is a perfectly good sentence.
Suddenly/All of a sudden
Youβve heard this one, before, surely. These words are usedβ¦when? When youβre trying to portray suddenness. Surprise, perhaps. So why are you adding in extra words to slow down the pace?
She flipped on the TV and reclined in her chair. All of sudden, the TV flashed a bright light and the power went out. vs. She flipped on the TV and reclined in her chair. The TV flashed once before the lights went dark. The power was out.
That sense of immediacy is felt when stuff just happens. So let it happen. If itβs rhythm youβre worried about, then find more useful words to create the rhythm. Notice that I didnβt just cut βAll of a suddenβ out of the sentence and leave it. I reworded it a bit to make it stronger.
Finally
It can be a useful word, but more often than not, itβs just taking up space.
Really/Very
Justβ¦delete them.
To alter a Mark Twain quote:
βSubstitute β[fucking]β every time youβre inclined to write βvery;β your editor will delete it and the writing will be just as it should be.β
But seriously, if youβre saying, βShe was breathing very hard.β You could just cut the βveryβ and say, βShe was breathing hard.β Or, even better, βShe was panting.β Or, EVEN BETTER: βShe panted.β
Himself/herself/myself/themselves
Reflexive nouns have a specific purpose, though they can still often be avoided. They fall into the category of βuse only when itβs confusing otherwise.β
Correct: He looked at himself in the mirror. Better: He looked in the mirror.
Incorrect: She gave them to Andrew and myself before leaving. Correct: She gave them to Andrew and me before leaving.
Technically correct I guess: I havenβt eaten lunch myself. (Intensive pronoun; aka waste of words) Better: I havenβt eaten lunch.
Intensive pronouns add emphasis, but that emphasis is negligible and often negated by the power of tightening your narrative.
That
You can likely cut 60% of your βthat"s and your story will be unaffected. Sometimes, you do need to add a βthatβ here and there for clarification, but not always. And sometimes itβs just plain incorrect.
The jacket was the coolest one that heβd ever owned. vs. The jacket was the coolest one heβd ever owned.
In other cases, you might do well to substitute βthatβ with βwhich.β Though, if youβre doing this, make sure you do it properly. That change can often alter the meaning of your sentence. That can be for the better, though.
The vandalism that read βBad Wolfβ made Rose nervous. vs. The vandalism, which read βBad Wolf,β made Rose nervous.
Do you see the difference? In the first sentence, the words are what make Rose nervous. In the second, the vandalism itself makes Rose nervous, and it happens to say βBad Wolf.β In this case, if youβve watched Doctor Who, then you know the first example is the correct one.
So when youβre sharing details using βthatβ or βwhich,β contemplate how important they are to meaning of the sentence to determine which type of clause you need to use.
Then
Or worse, βAnd then.β
It makes your writing sound a bit juvenile. Either cut it entirely, or substitute βand.β
She jumped into the pool, then hit her head on the bottom. vs. She jumped into the pool and hit her head on the bottom.
And then, after all that time, she fell asleep. vs. After all that time, she fell asleep.
Even
Sometime βevenβ can help emphasize a situation or behavior, but when itβs used in narrative improperly, it sounds childish and silly.
He couldnβt even breathe. vs. He couldnβt breathe.
Even with the new hair gel, his hair was terrible. (This one is fine, though you could still cut that βevenβ if you really wanted toβ¦)
Just
Justβ¦Delete it.
Breathe/breath/exhale/inhale/sigh/nod/shrug
Another one Iβm soΒ guilty of. In my first drafts, I tend to talk about how a character is breathing, or when theyβre sighing like nobodyβs business. I know a lot of writers who are guilty of this, too. Itβs a great tool to use scarcely. In intense moments, you can let your character take a final deep breath to calm themselves. When a character almost drowns, those first few sweet breaths are important. But you readers know that people breath all the time. And just because you need a beat in your dialogue doesnβt mean you need to remind your reader that the character is still breathing or moving.
Rather/quite/somewhat
She was rather tall. She was tall. He was quite idiotic. He was idiotic. They were somewhat snazzy. They were snazzy. Why do you need those words? Kill βem.
Start/begin
This is a great example of fluff.
She started to run toward the shop. vs. She ran toward the shop.
He began scolding them for their performance. vs. He scolded them for their performance.
There are obviously uses for this word, like anything. He started the car. Begin your tests! But when youβre using it to slow the action and the pace of your narrative, then consider heavily if you need it. You probably donβt.
In order to/in an attempt to
Phrases that add unneeded complications, cumbersome wordingβ¦kill βem!
She bit down in an attempt to stop herself from screaming. vs. She bit down to stop herself from screaming.
Was able to
He was able to call. vs. He could call. OR He called.
This is one that isnβt inherently bad, but it can easily be overused and cutting it will help simplify your narrative.
Due to
Ugh. Are you trying to sound proper and stuffy? Because thatβs a reason, I guess, to use this phraseβ¦and yet it sounds like doodoo. (Yes. Iβm an adult.) Rephrase. Use βBecause ofβ or just avoid the need altogether.
We stopped due to traffic. vs. We stopped because of traffic. OR (Strength of narrative!) We stopped mid-highway. The parked cars went on beyond the curve of the road, out of sight.
Visibly/obviously/apparently/audibly
These are a sign of telling in your narrative when you should probably be showing.
She was visibly shaking. β> She shivered, hugging her upper arms. He was obviously tired. β> He yawned and tripped on his own feet as he crossed the room. They were apparently angry. β> They stomped and shouted, demanding attention. She screamed audibly. (Really?) β> She screamed.
Donβt tell your readers what emotion a character is feeling. Instead, give a few clues that they can see/hear/feel the emotion too.
While
This word has lots of legitimate uses. However, if youβre using it poorly, then your narrative reads like an Early Readerβs book, and you (unless thatβs what youβre writing) probably donβt want that.
βGet it together,β he said while flipping them off. vs. βGet it together,β he said, flipping them off.
Turned
One of the classics. So overused, my friends. Itβs needed on occasion, but not nearly as often as we use it. Just cut it out.
They turned toward her as they spoke. vs. They gave her their full attention as they spoke. OR They looked into her eyes. OR (Nothing. Readers donβt have to be updated on every little movement.)
Saw/looked/regarded
UGH. Regarded:Looked::Mentioned:Said
And, like βsaid,β many, many instances of these words can be nixed.
She saw them run for the hills. vs. They ran for the hills.
This can be tricky, I know, when youβre writing in limited-third or first POV. Itβs tempting to put every action directly through your POV characterβs filter. But resist that temptation! There are times when itβs appropriate, occasionally, but it can be overdone so easily.
I looked at her and said, βPlease.β vs. I said,β Please.β OR. I took her hand. βPlease.β
This example sides with the breathing and the turning. Itβs often an unneeded update on the tiny movements of the characters. And, again, sometimes you need that beat or that little detail in an intense moment, but not often.
Said/replied/stated/spoke/mentioned/asked/commented/yelled/cried/shouted
Iβm not here to tell you to cut all your dialogue tags (please donβt). Iβm also going to the last person who insists you get rid ofΒ βsaid.β In fact, Iβm in theΒ βsaid is invisibleβ party of writing nerds and I think, if youβre going to use a standard tag, it should beΒ βsaidβ 90% of the time.Β
But aside from that, using as few dialogue tags as possible is a good thing. Iβll do a full post on this soon, but for now, be aware of how often you rely on these words in your dialogue and do your best not to overuse them. Use surrounding action and context to take some of the reliance off of these words.Β
To-Be in all its conjugated forms
If youβre using any of this list:
am, is, are, was, were, be, being, had been
Then check yo'self. Some tenses call for an auxiliary verb. Some types of sentence do, too, not doubt about it. But many donβt, and cutting to-be verbs when you can will help tighten your writing.
We were going to the store. vs. We went to the store.
Sounds were echoing through the chamber. vs. Sounds echoed through the chamber.
To-be verbs can also be an indicator of passive voice, though they arenβt always.
He was hit by the ball. vs. The ball hit him.
Last but not least, check all of your adverbs.
Chances are, if youβre using an adverb, you could be using a single strong verb instead and giving each sentence more punch.
He ran quickly. β> He sprinted. I hit him hard. β> I socked him. She spoke quietly. β> She whispered. They ran into each other fast. β> They crashed.
So what am I supposed to do about this?
Take it to heart. Try not to let these words take over your brain as you write. Once your manuscript is finished, try this method:
Use Find and Replace. Replace any and all of the aforementioned words in ALL-CAPS. Now, if youβve paid attention to my advice in using emphasis, then those all-caps will really stick out as youβre reading over your work and you can decide at each instance whether your usage is appropriate, or if it needs to be rewritten. As I did to this very old draft of mine from my first NaNoWriMo (in which I used every single word on this list, Iβm sure).
When I used this method with my most recent WIP, I was able to cut my word count from 105k to 93k without cutting any content whatsoever. It takes a lot of work and itβs pretty tedious but the results are amazing!
It wouldnβt be the English language without exceptions, would it?
Now, there is actually an important time for intentionally using any or all of the words on this list. You know when that is?
When it fits the characterβs voice. - More on this in my next post!
Rescued Writing Links!
When cleaning out the HEY, Writers! Pinterest I moved some links here. The internet has changed a LOT since I started collecting these, so some links may include outdated info. All were still active when I made this, but it's been in my drafts for a hot minute.
Protip! In Firefox, check to toggle reader view when reading these (mobile: the page icon in the url bar; desktop: same icon or hit F9). This removes popups, ads, screen clutter, and often has an audio option.
Survivors of Internet Decay Award!
These active sites featured most often in my collections so they get the top of the list.
Helping Writers Become Authors
Mythcreants
Bryn Donovan
Getting Started (Ideas & Intros)
How to Start Writing a Book: Learn One Writerβs Process | Marian Schembari
How to Start a Story: 30 Opening Scene Examples | Bryn Donovan
Donβt Panic! What to Do When You Have Too Many Story Ideas | Faye Kirwin
How to Write a Killer First Chapter | Rae Elliot
How To Write A Captivating Opening Sentence
Outlining
How to Create a Flexible Outline for Your Novel | Faye Kirwin
Protagonists
How to Write Believable Characters | Bridget McNulty
4 Ways to Write a Likable Protag at the Start of the Character Arc | KM Weiland
5 Tips for Writing a Likable "Righteous" Character | KM Weiland
I Hate Your Protagonist! Want to Know Why? | KM Weiland
The Secret to Writing Dynamic Characters: It's Always Their Fault | KM Weiland
A Protagonistβs Moment of Realisation
Antagonists
Blurring the Lines: What Are Anti-Heroes and Anti-Villains?
Antagonists: Inner & Outer Demons | Kristen Lamb
How to Write Multiple Antagonists | KM Weiland
Character Building
The Epic Guide to Character Creation, Part 1 | Kylie Day
Pick Up A Bad Habit | Maggie Maxwell
How To Write Characters from the Opposite Gender | Rachel Poli
Top 4 Tips for Using Backstory in Your Novel | Diana Anderson-Tyler
Depicting Background Characters | Chris Winkle
Scene Building
The 5 Elements Of A Good Scene | Amanda Patterson
A New Way to Think About Scene Structure | KM Weiland
2 Ways to Make the Most of Your Storyβs Climactic Setting | KM Weiland
Descriptions
Master List of Facial Expressions | Bryn Donovan
Master List of Words to Describe Voices | Bryn Donovan
Master List of Physical Description for Writers | Bryn Donovan
Writerβs Guide to Serious Injuries and Calamities | Bryn Donovan
How to Ground Your Reader (in the setting) | Rachel Craft
The Forgotten Fifth Sense | Writer's Relief
Never Name an Emotion in Your Story | KM Weiland
Show, Don't Tell: How to Write the Stages of Grief | Ruthanne Reid
100 Words for Facial Expressions
Dialogue
How To Write Good Dialogue: Ten Tips | Irving Weinman
Seven Dialogue Donβts | Jason Bougger
10 Keys to Writing Dialogue in Fiction | Katherine Cowley
Points-Of-View (POV)
What Every Writer Ought to Know About the Omniscient POV | KM Weiland
Motivation & Support
What New Writers Need To Know About Fear | Bryan Collins
How to Discover Your Writing Process with Gabriela Pereira | Kirsten Oliphant
Editing & Revising
18 Overused Words to Replace When Writing | Oxford Tutoring
An Easy Way to Immediately Improve Your Characterβs Action Beats | KM Weiland
Want More Depth to Your Writing? | Sacha Black
How Much is Too Much Backstory? | Ellen Brock
Why Your Writing Sounds Weird (And What You Can Do About It) | Joe Brock
Self-Editing for Fiction Writers | Jenny Bravo
Favorite Revision and Editing Tricks
Short Stories & Flashfic
How to Write a Story a Week: A Day-by-Day Guide | Emily Wenstrom
How Flash Fiction / Microfiction Can Help With Your Writing | Rhianne Williams
Worksheets & Downloads
Writing Worksheet Archive
8 Things Writers Forget When Writing Fight Scenes | Lisa Voisin
If anyone out there loves making lists and wants to transport this to another site, you have every right to do so! Just let me know in a reblog so I can share it here again :)
---
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Andrew Garfield talks to Elmo about grief and the passing of his mother
TOMMY KINARD with the SCRUNCHY SMILE
Evan Buckley vs. Ladders π¨π»βπ πͺ
TOMMY KINARD in the 9-1-1 SEASON 7 TRAILER
MADDIE BUCKLEY 9-1-1 2.02 '7.1'
Tracie Thoms on Celebrity Family Feud (16/09/24)
911onabc: we are BUZZING with excitement ππππ itβs going to BEE an amazing season ππππ you wonβt BEELIEVE whatβs happening πππ BEE there or BEE square πππ Beauty is in the eye of the BEE-holder πππππ
Me: can Iβ
911onabc: weβve BEEN waiting to show you πππweβve BEEN BUZZY putting s8 together ππππ coming this SeptemBEE πππ itβs gonna be all the BUZZ πππ we are never BEEting the allegations πππ itβs gonna STING πππ the cast is the BEEs knees πππ
Me: trailerβ
911onabc: thereβs a BEE-nado coming πππ itβs BEEN fun πππ this season will FLY ππππ season eight? More like season BEE ππππππππ itβs BEEXICTING ππππ you BEEtter BEE there ππππͺπππππππ BEE ππππ WE BEENT BEE TO BEE YOU WHAT BEE ARE BEEING ππππππππππππ BEE HAPPY WITH WHAT WE GIVE YOU ππππ
Me: so that plane crashβ
911onabc: DONT BEE LATE πππ WE GOT THE WHOLE LGπTQ πππππ IS YOUR BLOOD TYPE BEE POSITIVE? πππ IT JS NOW πππ THE MOUSTACHE IS ABOUT TO GET A BUZZ-CUT πππππ HONEY π― DONT BE A BA-BEE ππππ ITS GONNA BE A BEE-UTIFUL BUZZY DAY ππππππ
Me: anything elseβ
911onabc: BUZZ OFF ππππ BEEHAVE ππππ BUZZ YOURSELF πππ IM BEE-THREATENING YOU ππππ BEE HAPPY πππ S-BEE-SON EIGHT BEE-COMING BEE-SOON πππππ BEE THERE YOU BEE-IDIOT πππ
When s8 shows the bee-nado being short and leading the the actual plane emergency, 911onabc is gonna be like:
We FUELed ya! βοΈβοΈβοΈ Watch next week as this arc takes FLIGHT βοΈβοΈβοΈ you thought we were PLANE boring βοΈβοΈβοΈ but this is gonna TAKE OFF βοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈ make sure to FLY into next week βοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈ it will be PLANE-ty interesting βοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈ gonna be the best show on AIR βοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈ make sure to check out the rest of the show including the PILOT βοΈβοΈβοΈ we bet this LANDED far above your expectations βοΈβοΈβοΈ I hope these puns arenβt FLYING OVER YOUR HEAD βοΈβοΈβοΈ CHECK OUT THE NEW SEASON OF 911 NEEEEEOOOOOOOWWW βοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈ
Us: ποΈπποΈ
Oliver Stark on Celebrity Family Feud
9-1-1 | 5.02 Desperate Times
Oliver Stark as Evan "Buck" Buckley 9-1-1, S01E01 - Pilot