In my updated book The Elements of Writing, I offer simple, actionable techniques for storytelling, mechanics, and analysis.
You can get a sense of my system with this outline of The Elements of Writing. After listing the writing skill, I offer a case study showing how to apply the skill. Most of the case studies come from great literature, film, and journalism.
The Core Idea—The Golden Rule of Writing
- Make Everything a Journey: Brent Staples’s “Black Men in Public Space’
- Start Strong, Finish Strong: William Nack’s Secretariat
- Take the Landscape View: Applying the Landscape View
Act I: Storytelling
1. Narrative
- Give Your Story a Narrative Arc: Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood
- For Complexity, Show More Than One Arc: Robert Caro’s The Passage of Power
- Show Characters Hitting Brick Walls: Homer’s The Odyssey
- Nest Journeys Inside Journeys: Andre Agassi’s Open
2. Characters
- Compile Dossiers for Your Characters: Sherlock Holmes
- Explore Characters’ Lives, Zone by Zone: Milan Kundera’s The Unbearable Lightness of Being
- Find Your Characters’ Throughlines: Heroes of the Civil Rights Movement
- Use the Wheel of Archetypes: L. Frank Baum’s The Wizard of Oz (55
- Spin the Wheel of Archetypes: Gregory Maguire’s Wicked
3. World of the Story
- Create Small, Knowable Places: Emma Donaghue’s Room
- Map the Character’s “Circles of Life”: Gay Talese’s ‘Frank Sinatra Has a Cold’
- Use Place to Explain Character and Ideas: Robert Caro’s The Path To Power
- Use Place to Explore Identity: Judith Ortiz Cofer’s Silent Dancing
- Place Stories in a Larger World: Henry Roth’s Call It Sleep
4. Action and Scenes
- Depict Specific, Deliberate Actions: Robert Penn Warren’s All the King’s Men
- Use Speech-Acts to Propel the Story: William Shakespeare’s Othello
- Build Actions into Scenes: William Shakespeare’s Macbeth
- Create a Mystery to Surprise the Reader: William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet
5. Rhythm and Beats
- Use beats to Move Stories Forward: Casablanca
- Use Beats For Descriptions: Fatima Mernissi’s Dreams of Trespass
- Yo-Yo Scene and Summary:Elizabeth Gilbert’s ‘Lucky Jim’
6. Details
- Find Details By Looking Inside-Out: Isabel Chenoweth’s ‘Hanging Out’
- Isolate Details to Make Big Points: The New York Times ‘Portraits in Grief’
- Use Status Details to Reveal Ego and Desire: Tom Wolfe’s A Man in Full
- Put Details into Action: Journalism fragments
Intermission: On Style
7. The Senses
- Help the Reader to Feel: Scott Russell Sanders’s ‘Under the Influence’
- Help the Reader to See: Mark Twain’s Life on the Mississippi
- Help the Reader to Hear: Varieties of Onomatopoeia
8. Wordplay
- Tap Into Life’s Everyday Rhythms: Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address
- Use Metaphors and Similes to Orient and Disorient: Rick Reilly and Thomas Lunch
- Riff by Playing with Words: Roy Blount Jr.’s Alphabet Juice
- Remember that Good is Great: Tom Wolfe’s From Bauhaus to Our House
9. Numbers
- Use Ones to Highlight People, Places, and Issues: Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead
- Use Twos to Establish Oppositions and Complements: The Yankees-Red Sox rivalry
- Use Threes to Reveal Dynamic Relations: Woody Allen’s Hannah and Her Sisters
- Use Lists to Show Complexity: Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried
Act II: Mechanics
10. Sentences
- Follow the Golden Rule for Sentences: Coverage of national Crises
- Give Every Sentence Clear Blasts: Ringo Starr and the Beatles
- Create Revolver Sentences: Stephen Crane’s Red Badge of Courage
- Make Some Sentences More Complicated: Stanley Fish’s How to Write a Sentence
- Alternate Short and Long Sentences: Ernest Hemingway’s journalism
11. Words
- Use Simple Words, Almost Always: John McPhee’s The Curve of Binding Energy and In Suspect Terrain
- Use Longer Words as Precision Instruments: The American Sesquipdalian
- Use Active Verbs, Even to Describe Passivity: Laura Hillenbrand’s Unbroken and Ivan Goncharov’s Oblomov
- Avoid the Verbs To Be and To Have: Using ‘to be’ and ‘to have’
- Avoid Bureaucratese and Empty-Calorie Words: George Orwell’s ‘The Politics of the English Language’
- Avoid Aggressive Adjectives and Adverbs: Tom Wolfe’s ‘The Girl of the Year’
12. Paragraphs
- Make Every Paragraph an “Idea Bucket”: Journalism fragments
- Follow the Golden Rule in Every Paragraph: James Van Tholen’s ‘Surprised by Death’
- ‘Climb the Arc’ in Most Paragraphs: Martin Luther King’s ‘Mountaintop’ speech
13. Composition
- Make Every Piece a Journey: Theodore Dreiser’s Sister Carrie
- Find the Right Shape: The Bill Clinton story
- Slot Your Paragraphs: Malcolm Gladwell’s “The Terrazzo Jungle”
- Make Transitions Virginia Wolff’s ‘Ellen Terry’
Intermission: Technical Procedures
14. Grammar
- Make Sure the Parts of Speech Get Along: Approaches to the his/her problem
- Use Punctuation to Direct Traffic: Ernest Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea and Robert Caro’s The Passage of Power
- Select the Right Word: William Safire’s ‘On Language’
15. Editing
- Search and Destroy, From Big to Small: Marie Kondo’s The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up
- Fix Problem Paragraphs With Tabloid Headlines: John Stuart Mill’s On Liberty
- Edit by Reading Aloud and Backward: C.S. Lewis’s The Four Loves
- Murder Your Darlings: Raymond Carver’s ‘One More Thing’
Act III: Analysis
16. Storytelling for Analysis
- Narrate Complex Issues: Eugenie Ladner Birch’s ‘From Flames to Flowers’
- Use Beats to Make Arguments: On the Electoral College System
- Use Cliffhangers to Drive Analysis: Barry Bluestone’s ‘The Inequality Express’
- Use the Senses in Arguments and Rhetoric: Martin Luther King’s ‘I have a Dream’ Oration
- Allow Ideas To Unfold, One by One: ‘Falling Man’
17. Questions and Brainstorming
- To Get Started, Spill Your Mind: Brainstorming nonviolence
- Ask This-or-That and W Questions: Brian Lamb’s interviewing techniques
- Always Ask: What Causes What?: What’s the ‘best’ form of government?
18. Framing
- Use Testimony of Experts and Others: The Debate Over Global Warming
- Consider Hypotheticals and Scenarios: Social contract theorists
- Find a Super Model to Guide Analysis: Super models of social science
19. Making a Case
- Climb the “Ladder of Abstraction”: Garrison Keillor’s Lena and Ole Joke
- Identify and Operationalize Variables: The causes of fatigue
- Crunch the Numbers: Edward Glaeser on Urban Vitality
- Play the Game of Halves: Exploring the causes of war