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This writing course prepares
you for success |
| The 450-page course manual for Breaking into Print
contains 12 send-in assignments grouped in three major blocks of
instruction in the techniques of writing fiction and nonfiction.
More than 75 skill-building exercises and over 50 tips on writing
techniques are included.
You’ll also receive 10 textbooks, 15
instructional supplements, nearly 200 sources for further study, and
an exclusive guide to the more than 1,700 publications most likely
to buy your writing.
With these carefully selected tools and the
expert guidance of your personal instructor, you’ll achieve—and
perhaps exceed—the goals of this program:
By the time you finish our program, you will complete at least two
manuscripts suitable to submit to editors. You’ll also write a
character sketch, plans for six stories and articles, and eight
complete manuscripts.
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Part 1: Writing
to catch a reader’s
interest
You sharpen your powers of descriptive writing, draw on your
personal experience for story and article material, and learn the
discipline of writing to a word count. Your instructor will show you
how to establish professional work habits to make the most of your
time. |
| You learn how to plan and construct stories and articles, how to
catch the reader’s interest, how to build to a climax, and how to
write a satisfying ending.
You are taught how to look for detail
with a writer’s eye and how to use these details in forceful,
effective
fiction and nonfiction.
The ability to perceive and examine your surroundings for article
and story material is taught in the program manual and through
analyzing published stories to compare the techniques used by
professional authors. |
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Your program includes the 450-page Breaking into
Print instruction manual; Searching: A Research
Guide for Writers, a handbook of techniques and
sources, including how to use the Internet as a research
tool; and Best of the Magazine Markets for Writers,
our up-to-date guide to more than 1,700 selected
freelance markets categorized in 92 distinctive genres. |
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This section
demonstrates that there are innumerable imaginative ways of finding
ideas and infinite varieties of methods for developing rough
concepts into polished writing. |
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Techniques taught in Part 1 |
-
observing with a writer’s eye
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using sensory detail
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specific vs. general language
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showing vs. telling
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setting a scene
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using dialogue/quotes
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“hook” beginnings/satisfying endings
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correct manuscript format
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- analyzing a magazine’s makeup
- assembling a magazine “library”
- identifying popular market types of
fiction/nonfiction
- analyzing magazines in detail
- finding new ideas
- tying ideas to markets
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- developing truth into fiction
- character motivation
- defining the story problem/conflict
- inner as well as outer conflict
- plot complications
- plausible resolutions
- “headlining” your story idea
- three-part story structure
- 1st- vs. 3rd-person narrative
- from anecdote to plot
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- creating a
conflict
- scenes as building blocks
- transitions
- single viewpoint and other choices
- using flashbacks
- eliminating “stage directions”
- revision guides
- types of story openings
- writing a story summary
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- finding an idea
- finding a slant
- three-part article structure
- using anecdotes and quotes
- dynamic titles
- factual accuracy
- “headlining” your article idea
- the dynamic lead
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- types of organization
- paragraphing
- transitions
- brief endings
- eliminating clutter
- revision guides
- types of article openings
- writing an article summary
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- proofreaders’ marks
- Story Planning Chart
- Article Planning Chart
- magazine description forms
- character sketch form
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- technique highlights
- style tips
- computer tips
- time management tips
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You begin your
training by mastering the basics of good writing. Then, with steady
guidance from your personal instructor, you’ll
explore various forms of fiction and nonfiction writing to help you
to find the niche that fits your personal and professional goals and
aspirations. |
Part 2: Finding your
own genre Your writing takes on a new dimension in this section of the
program. You move from a generalized plan to writing a manuscript
targeted to a specific readership. Your growing skills in using
effective techniques and your increasing knowledge of markets help
to point the way to your individual writing strengths. |
| You learn the techniques of identifying the market for which you
want to write by using a directory published by Long Ridge Writers
Group titled The Best of the Magazine Markets for Writers.
You learn how to tailor your manuscript to fit the editorial
requirements of specific publications, when and how to write a query
letter, and where to send it. |
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Your textbooks include Voices, three volumes
of exemplary fiction and nonfiction that are key to your
search for a genre. |
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| You explore the
vast and varied nonfiction market—its unique
features relative to the market for fiction writing—and learn to
apply the techniques and skills you have developed to prepare
saleable articles.
You discover why nonfiction is a very responsive and growing market,
particularly for new authors. |
Techniques taught in Part 2
Fiction techniques |
- enhancing conflict
- plotting twists and turns
- building to a dramatic climax
- endings: plausibility, inevitability
- point and meaning
- emotion and story drive
- secondary characters
- dynamic dialogue
- inner dialogue
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- selective use of setting
- scene construction
- playing
“what
if?”
- choosing between 1st- and 3rd-person modes
- scenes: mixing action,
dialogue, narrative, and inner narrative
- when to show and when
to tell
- revision strategies
- the right title
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- the how-to article
- the informational article
- setting a scene
- the personality profile
- quoting and paraphrasing
- action, anecdotes, humor
- clarity and pace
- self-editing
- types of nonfiction markets
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- targeting a readership
- targeting a
specific magazine
- fresh vs. predictable slants
- strong vs. weak leads
- research strategies
- writing a query letter
- sidebars and subheads
- revision strategies
- the right title
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- character sketch form
- Research Strategy Plan
- Magazine Choice Forms
- sample query letters
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- technique highlights
- style tips
- computer tips
- time management tips
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| At the end of Part 2 you will have reached a milestone: the
completion of two articles or stories, edited and
targeted to the market. |
| Part 3: Writing for
editors and publishers |
| The objective of the program and the challenge to you and your
instructor is to develop your skills, resources,
and work habits to a level that will prepare you to keep on writing—independently—long after you complete your training.
Focusing on the
special strengths and interests you developed in the program, you
complete three additional manuscripts and devise a strategy for
marketing them. |
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Four contemporary classics, specially selected to
complement the program, are included in your materials. |
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Techniques taught in Part 3 |
- analyzing your strengths and weaknesses
- analyzing magazine guidelines
- researching local markets
- a professional writer’s resource bank
- staking out and furnishing an office
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- revising an editorial request
- self-promotion
- copyrights and contracts
- taxes and accounting
- commercial writing as a financial
mainstay
- professional ethics
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- open-ended plot structure
- pros and cons of experimentation
- combining dialogue with action
and thought
- more on viewpoint choices/techniques
- manipulating time: flashbacks and
foreshadowing
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- creating key scenes
- testing your story’s effectiveness
- genres revisited, with marketing pointers
- warm-ups to maintain and sharpen skills
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- creative nonfiction
- slanting a familiar topic
- the personal experience article
- 7 types of leads
- an upbeat slant
- testing your article’s effectiveness
- adult reading levels
- more on transitions
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- focus, coherence, and unity—from lead into body of article
- genres revisited, with marketing
pointers
- spin-offs from research
- finding a hook for your query letter
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- more sample query letters
- revision checklist
- Magazine Choice Forms
- story summary/article idea sheets
- Record of Submissions Form
- Record of Expenses Form
- technique highlights
- style tips
- selected bibliography
- Course Index
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Long Ridge’s
coveted diploma will be awarded to you when you complete
the program. |
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After you find your
genre,
you’ll study the markets and
publications in it that welcome freelance manuscripts. By
the time you finish the program, you’ll complete at least two
manuscripts—fiction, nonfiction,
or one of each—that are ready
to submit for publication. |
| It is of great importance that you adjust your study hours to your
schedule and work at a rate you find comfortable. Your work pace and
rate of progress are up to you. Remember, the essentials of this
program are
flexibility and individual instruction designed to meet your
personal and professional goals and aspirations. |
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LongRidge Writers Group
91 Long Ridge Road, West Redding, Connecticut 06896
Telephone: 1-800-624-1476 ~ Fax: 203-792-8406
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Copyright © Writer's Institute, Inc., 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002,
2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008
No part of the electronic transmission to which this notice is appended may be
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