Hemingway's Four Amazing Rules for Writing

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  • Опубліковано 26 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 619

  • @VelocityWriting
    @VelocityWriting  6 років тому +354

    Hemingway's famous 1940 novel is, "For Whom the Bell Tolls." Please excuse the slip of the lip in this video.

    • @judithrandall4690
      @judithrandall4690 4 роки тому +7

      You're forgiven.

    • @mickeyaugrec7560
      @mickeyaugrec7560 3 роки тому +6

      It's a reference to a John Donne poem.

    • @yurtbastendorf
      @yurtbastendorf 3 роки тому +5

      An innocent parapraxis. I survived.

    • @halffasthaiku7526
      @halffasthaiku7526 3 роки тому +1

      You scared me!

    • @mangstadt1
      @mangstadt1 3 роки тому +1

      Inoticed that one. Interestingly, in Spanish the title was shifted to "Por quién doblan las campanas" (For Whom the Bells Toll). Not that I would read Hemingway in Spanish (or any Spanish-language writer in English, for that matter).

  • @TheStockwell
    @TheStockwell 3 роки тому +365

    My favourite literary joke:
    "Why did the chicken cross the road?"
    "To die. Alone. In the rain."
    - Ernest Hemingway

    • @TombstoneHeart
      @TombstoneHeart 3 роки тому +15

      Was that on a dark and stormy night? lol

    • @glennmiller9768
      @glennmiller9768 3 роки тому +6

      Q: Why did the chicken cross the road? A: Because the road had made the chicken cross first. Getting even y'see.

    • @andreacall3024
      @andreacall3024 3 роки тому +10

      This is hilarious. I feel like it sums up all his work.

    • @johntrojan9653
      @johntrojan9653 3 роки тому +3

      On a dark. Stormy. Night.

    • @normanleach5427
      @normanleach5427 3 роки тому +3

      This is a great challenge! Like a koan, I'll cling to it until I'm weary, unsure that the answer will...Papa you fox!

  • @kingmastersupreme4854
    @kingmastersupreme4854 3 роки тому +103

    "The highest form of architecture is the building of a sentence." ~ CHARLES F. HAANEL

    • @dorianphilotheates3769
      @dorianphilotheates3769 3 роки тому +2

      King Master Supreme - Damn!

    • @davideldred.campingwilder6481
      @davideldred.campingwilder6481 3 роки тому

      that\s s really good saying. Thank you for it...

    • @Cherem777
      @Cherem777 3 роки тому +1

      Lol any architect will tell you that’s a lie

    • @scottcowan5096
      @scottcowan5096 3 роки тому +4

      @@Cherem777 cute saying, yes. My rule of thumb: don’t read poetry written by engineers and don’t walk across bridges designed by poets.

  • @JohnnyCardinale
    @JohnnyCardinale 4 роки тому +342

    In a college English class, best thing I ever learned was, when writing, go ahead and write your paper, and then go back and cross out any words that are not necessary. Seems simple and kind of silly. I used that for years, in anything I wrote and MAN what a help. Best thing I ever learned in college (and.I was a math major). FYI: Hemingway would not have approved of my first sentence in this comment.

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  4 роки тому +21

      Great tip!

    • @maskednil
      @maskednil 4 роки тому +16

      Should have applied it to this comment lol.
      Thanks for the tip.

    • @JohnnyCardinale
      @JohnnyCardinale 4 роки тому +2

      @@maskednil #Truth!

    • @tropicaldoodad
      @tropicaldoodad 4 роки тому +22

      "I learned, write your paper, then cross out unnecessary words." There ya go! It is true.

    • @PeterPepper93
      @PeterPepper93 4 роки тому +13

      @@tropicaldoodad somehow this feels clinical and dry compared to his version

  • @Y-Soightnie
    @Y-Soightnie 4 роки тому +453

    Don't forget to break every one of these rules when you must.

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  4 роки тому +180

      I'd say you have made an important comment, Don. Hemingway broke the stodgy 19th century writing rules, and it helped him achieve fame and fortune in the 20th century. We should all be learning from the greats like Hemingway, but we should not be afraid to break rules when we must.
      In my experience, immature writers break the rules just because they can. They think they are so radical. Sadly, they end up as poor communicators. On the other hand, mature writers know when to break the rules and why they are doing it. We should all be breaking the rules when we must.

    • @vickielberfeld2014
      @vickielberfeld2014 4 роки тому +34

      Hemingway deserves to be read along with many other writers with different styles. Not every writer needs to conform to Hemingway.

    • @judithrandall4690
      @judithrandall4690 4 роки тому +7

      @@VelocityWriting You are a kind and gracious soul.

    • @happylittletrees5668
      @happylittletrees5668 4 роки тому +34

      "Learn the rules like a pro, so you can break them like an artist." Though said by Pablo Picasso it applies to all art forms.

    • @sadbadmac
      @sadbadmac 3 роки тому +2

      @@happylittletrees5668 I think this has been said by every major figure of any art form lol

  • @roivosemraiva
    @roivosemraiva 3 роки тому +13

    I must add, as child living in Cuba, I met the original Old Man Of The Sea. All school children visited his , Finca De Hemingway. I did not know what impact meeting this man would make later on. Thank you for your Channel..

  • @nickolaibrowne
    @nickolaibrowne 6 років тому +190

    I don't know how I stumbled upon this. I do know however that this was made with care and expertise in order to instruct and encourage writers everywhere. Thank you

  • @robderiche
    @robderiche 2 роки тому +25

    Rule #5: Know when to stop editing. In my quest for lean prose, I once starved a story by gradually removing salient details with each pass. The problem was I knew the characters and situations so well after multiple drafts that I unconsciously assumed the reader would be similarly familiar. It was like putting a fresh pencil in a sharpener and grinding until just a nub, thereby missing the point.

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  2 роки тому +6

      You make a good point which is often overlooked.

    • @1990-t1j
      @1990-t1j 2 роки тому +1

      Great point. I totally agree.

  • @jeffreycrawley1216
    @jeffreycrawley1216 3 роки тому +26

    Rule 5: write drunk, edit sober.
    Rule 6: marry a wife who can correct your bad spelling and poor punctuation.

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  3 роки тому +5

      Ha! We can all add our own rules. One of my personal rules is to fact-check. For example, "the write drunk, edit sober" thing is part of lore and not accurate. Ernest Hemingway put to rest rumors about the role of alcohol in his writing. He said, "My training was never to drink after dinner nor before I wrote nor while I was writing."
      Of course, we all probably know from experience we can't edit when we are under the influence of anything. Cognitive brain function is severely diminished.
      A spouse of friend correcting your work? Hmm. I discuss that in this video: ua-cam.com/video/0khZSkKcIPI/v-deo.html

    • @subscribe_to_bimble
      @subscribe_to_bimble 3 роки тому +5

      I'm married to a girl named Grammarly.

    • @a.bagasm.7253
      @a.bagasm.7253 3 роки тому

      @@subscribe_to_bimble damn

  • @Matty88K
    @Matty88K 3 роки тому +9

    'The Boy in the Bubble' by Paul Simon is strikingly Hemingway in the opening lyric:
    "It was a slow day
    And the sun was beating
    On the soldiers by the side of the road
    There was a bright light
    A shattering of shop windows
    The bomb in the baby carriage
    Was wired to the radio."
    Echoes of Hemingway dispatches from In Our Time. One paragraph tells the entire story. Only two adjectives.

  • @cappy2282
    @cappy2282 3 роки тому +16

    In my opinion "A farewell to arms" is his best

  • @thewalkingwhales218
    @thewalkingwhales218 5 років тому +58

    I absolutely love Hemingway. But... Wilde's novel is brilliant, too. I think it is a bit short-sighted to call his style tedious. It just requires a different mind-set to appreciate it.

    • @kempfreehold9450
      @kempfreehold9450 3 роки тому +7

      I concur.
      Hemingway is like baking soda biscuits.
      Wilde is like a complicated braided cinnamon bread.
      Different, but both are good.

    • @floppabingussled
      @floppabingussled 3 роки тому +1

      The late great crime writer Elmore Leonard stated that Hemingway’s work had a profound influence on his writing style. The splendid economy of his writing over a span of over 60 years confirm the lessons he learned by appreciating Hemingway’s approach to effective writing.

    • @Line...
      @Line... 3 роки тому

      Absolutely!

    • @brianfergel129
      @brianfergel129 3 роки тому

      Charles Dickens was my earliest realization of differing and personal writing styles, but now is the time to find, adapt, readapt, or merely ontinue to sharpen that individual writing style by any & virtually every human alive, The written word has never been as strong, so the Internet has been sculpting far greater communications for humanity.

  • @TheJJO
    @TheJJO 3 роки тому +13

    I really liked the positive versus negative point, as I've never heard it before.

  • @Mayafav1212
    @Mayafav1212 3 роки тому +5

    A Farewell to Arms is probably his most beloved and most enduring novel.

  • @EmanueL-f2t
    @EmanueL-f2t 4 роки тому +115

    Most of his style is almost identical to what is taught in journalism courses.

    • @peterpuleo2904
      @peterpuleo2904 4 роки тому +14

      Yes. I enjoyed many of his short stories, and I liked "The Old Man and the Sea". I also liked his nonfiction "Death in the Afternoon". I never finished anything else he wrote because his sparse language lacked flair, and got boring.

    • @tacktful
      @tacktful 4 роки тому +16

      @@peterpuleo2904 this is the risk. It's frustrating when writing courses suggest we write like Hemingway. His style is not appropriate for all writers, or writing, by any means, and is based in its own metaphysics and world view. Still, good to have in your toolkit 👍

    • @odile8701
      @odile8701 4 роки тому +8

      Yep. But literature isn’t really journalism, is it? They kinda serve different purposes. Journalism is to inform. Literature should entertain and inspire, at least in my view.

    • @dragonchr15
      @dragonchr15 4 роки тому +5

      @@tacktful this. Hemingway wrote at a time when reading was a pursuit for high faluting educated types....so he broke from convention and wrote like a layman which made his books an easy read for even the most barely literate person....

    • @obiwanfisher537
      @obiwanfisher537 4 роки тому +5

      @@peterpuleo2904 I never understood why Hemingway is supposed to be the best. Luckily Im not alone.

  • @rickausten7013
    @rickausten7013 4 роки тому +29

    The same rules easily apply to navigating Marriage, Career and your horrific new neighbors.

  • @spacedoohicky
    @spacedoohicky 3 роки тому +10

    The writing positive rule really makes sense. Positive language is much more precise. If you say, "I did not feel good." that could mean you were feeling bad, or neutral. Negative language always bothers me for this reason. Inversely I think the rule can be broken for dialogue. Since realistic characters won't follow the rule, and also people use ambiguity to fool others. It might actually harm a story to have all the characters speaking, or thinking in positive language.

    • @NegativeAccelerate
      @NegativeAccelerate 3 роки тому

      Thanks for explaining. I never understood what was wrong with it

  • @lucymiller6616
    @lucymiller6616 3 роки тому +10

    Short sentences, long sentences. It's about pacing and variation.

  • @shawneasley1735
    @shawneasley1735 Рік тому +6

    I'm going to start writing this year. Short stories and poems for the next twelve months. My life experiences can influence your free will. This is your one and only warning 🙂

  • @johansiebers3579
    @johansiebers3579 3 роки тому +17

    Love Hemingway. There‘s before Hemingway and after Hemingway.

  • @Roger-mz4lx
    @Roger-mz4lx 3 роки тому +3

    Be confident when you write, don't be afraid to be unconventional. I've used the word "But" to start a sentence when I felt it was needed. And yes the best work will indeed have 3 maybe 4 draft's.

  • @nikolatesla5553
    @nikolatesla5553 3 роки тому +5

    These are great tips. Especially about the need for rewriting.. The story is created in the first draft. Rewriting transforms it into something readable. A third and maybe a fourth rewrite turn it into something others might actually want to read.

  • @mariamkinen8036
    @mariamkinen8036 4 роки тому +9

    " For whom the bell tolls", "The old man n the sea" I love his style

  • @christinemo9622
    @christinemo9622 4 роки тому +38

    Can I add another great piece of advice? George Orwell told us to go over our work and cut out as many adjectives as possible. When we think we are done, cut out one more.

    • @estebanb7166
      @estebanb7166 4 роки тому +11

      I love Orwell's writing, but I'm also a fan of judiciously deployed adjectives. I'm torn.

    • @PeterPepper93
      @PeterPepper93 4 роки тому +7

      @@estebanb7166 being torn is compound interest for writing.
      if you like both, obey the 80/20 rule to have constraint.
      if constraint is a creative blocker, put on paper how you would best sum up your topic orally.
      if none of this helps, put up a corpus of 3 texts coming from your Praise list, observe yourself resonating with some parts of the text. try to get into that state of mind and scream write it.
      another one that helped greatly for me was "write drunk, edit sober"
      good luck

    • @James-bv4nu
      @James-bv4nu 3 роки тому +7

      Beg to differ.
      Adjectives tell the story.
      Yes, they must be crisp, and apropos; but they are essential to a description.
      Without adjectives, every story would just be "Boy Meets Girl."
      But when you have, say, "Homely Boy Meets Beautiful Girl", now you have a story.

    • @Ekkobelli
      @Ekkobelli 3 роки тому +2

      @@estebanb7166 Agreed. I was taught: "If you come across an adjective: Kill it." (Can't remember who said that.) I applied it on all my texts and stories, only to end up with precise, on-point albeit clinical, dead prose. I now use adjectives again, but only very specific ones, mostly weird, unexpected ones that help define characters in subtle, almost subtextual ways. I think this is the way. Mostly, when people tell you: "Don't do this or that AT ALL" or "always do this" they're not right. There's always middle ground. Which is where your personal truth lies.

    • @ChefMike2
      @ChefMike2 3 роки тому +4

      @@Ekkobelli You don’t need adjectives to provide descriptions. Turn “It was a rainy or cloudy or windy or stormy day” to “The clouds had hidden the sun. “As the wind showed no mercy. Trees danced in solidarity, shaking off their leaves. And water had dominated the streets.” No adjectives but still vividly written.

  • @maliceburgoyne495
    @maliceburgoyne495 6 років тому +49

    I like how simple and concise this video was. No carrion no waste.

  • @AWildBard
    @AWildBard 4 роки тому +6

    I loved "The Old Man and the Sea." The story is simple and powerful. I keep thinking about it.

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  4 роки тому

      I re-read it a few months ago. It is so haunting, so human. We all need to have more strength of spirit like the old man. It's a worthwhile read for the COVID-19 era or anytime.

    • @CEO_success
      @CEO_success 4 роки тому +1

      AWildBard me too I read it in my own language. It was simple short and strong

    • @kingcaesar5
      @kingcaesar5 3 роки тому

      @@jamesaritchie1 love the movie and especially Spencer Tracy but we have to admit he didn’t look like a starving fisherman.

  • @c.s.hayden3022
    @c.s.hayden3022 3 роки тому +4

    Henry James probably epitomizes the long sentence. His late work had a distinctly ornate beauty, but this advice cuts to what strikes an impression most effectively and is a world more useful.

  • @berrinmina8159
    @berrinmina8159 6 років тому +56

    I'm an English Language and Literature student and I've just found your channel and I love it! Your speech is very clear and understandable!

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  6 років тому +11

      Thank you! Much appreciated. Please spread the word about this channel.

    • @raintelefilm
      @raintelefilm 4 роки тому +3

      @@VelocityWriting you are the most humble 'tone" that I ever heard, requesting so softly to subscribe. No wonder I became a fan.

  • @عائشةإبراهيم-ل4ف
    @عائشةإبراهيم-ل4ف 4 роки тому +13

    Thank you Sir. I'll be pleased to watch another video about Jack London's Style of writing. keep up your work.

  • @felixfifeauthor
    @felixfifeauthor 4 роки тому +9

    Awesome video. Clear and concise, like Hemingway himself

  • @williammorse8330
    @williammorse8330 5 років тому +30

    thank you.... the Hemingway personification in Woody Allen's "Midnight in Paris" comes to mind..... well done.
    short clips from a small town or city neighborhood..... punch writing...... works.

  • @RayW....
    @RayW.... 3 роки тому +3

    I subbed because you look like my 6th grade science teacher.The difference is you have a personality.

  • @FalloutUrMum
    @FalloutUrMum 3 роки тому +3

    When you mentioned extended sentences, I immediately remembered reading John Locke who sometimes seems to fill more than a page with one sentence

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  3 роки тому

      Yes, but that may be the main reason (along with his subject matter) why Locke does not sell many books. For example, his Oxford collection has average sales of $67 per month on Amazon.
      Meanwhile, just one Hemingway book, "A Farewell to Arms" is still selling at the rate of $ 10,240 per month. "For Whom the Bell Tolls" is doing $8,275 per month on Amazon. Those are the only two Hemingway titles I checked.
      So, short sentences win! :-)
      Of course, I hope you see I'm just playing. My facts are correct, but you need to consider the subject matter. That said, someone could probably make a load of money today if they re-wrote Locke so his circumlocutious sentences were more accessible to today's readers.

  • @bosatsu76
    @bosatsu76 3 роки тому +10

    Speaking of long sentences... Melville had em in spades... Moby dick's opening pages blew my mind... Fourteen commas, three colons, half a dozen semi colons before the first period shows up...

  • @nobeerlion3991
    @nobeerlion3991 4 роки тому +1

    I am writing in German and always looking for helpful input. Thank you for this. Very precious.

  • @flamindigo
    @flamindigo Рік тому +5

    The text was concise. The four rules were good advice.

  • @pspaulstewartinterviewinspires
    @pspaulstewartinterviewinspires 4 роки тому +8

    Thanks for creating this tutorial featuring the skills of Ernest Hemingway. Cheers!

  • @VonEssek
    @VonEssek 4 роки тому +11

    Hemingway is Hemingway. Style should depend on the subject matter and the author's voice; another author might prefer longer sentences and have a very good reason, too. And then you have the issue of different rhythm, syntax, etc. of various languages. It seems to me that "short" rules are arbitrary. Hemingway liked it that way, good for him. Years ago, Stephen King proposed eradicating adverbs altogether. Nonsense. There are very few rock-solid advice for writing and they are mostly not about style, but story, for example: to have some kind of conflict.

    • @stephenmctier8508
      @stephenmctier8508 4 роки тому +1

      exactly! this video is advice on how to write like Hemingway, not how to write in general (or 'in specific'!). create your own style, but certainly writing is rewriting and rewriting and rewriting...

    • @evinnra2779
      @evinnra2779 3 роки тому

      Couldn't agree more! My first rule for writing is that it is good to have something actually interesting to write about. Second rule, write the first chapter or paragraph last. Third rule, rewrite and rewrite until the rhythm is right.

    • @johneyon5257
      @johneyon5257 3 роки тому

      agreed - i have read a couple writers on writing - and watched his video - and will watch others in the future - but not to let their style wholly supplant mine - but instead to gain some perspective on the art - and adopt what fits me - and ignore what doesn't

  • @mencken8
    @mencken8 3 роки тому +1

    This omits “have something to say.” That lets out many writers, and reams of screed.

  • @wtk6069
    @wtk6069 4 роки тому +33

    In my writing, I extend Hemingway's advice about short opening paragraphs to most paragraphs. Unless there is a reason to do otherwise, I keep most paragraphs in the 3-5 sentence range. I use what I call the "pee" rule: If someone suddenly has the urge to pee just as they start the paragraph, they should be able to get to the end of the paragraph (a good stopping point) before they have to "go". This rule not only makes it more convenient for modern readers to start and stop reading as real life insists, but it also keeps things moving and helps turn the book into a page-turner with its own sustained momentum.

    • @channelfogg6629
      @channelfogg6629 4 роки тому

      'In my writing, I extend Hemmingway's advice...' - If you are planning to be a writer it's a good idea to get the small details right - like spelling Hemingway Hemingway.

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  4 роки тому +12

      Do you know where you are, Foggy? This is the internet. Almost everything is a first draft---young people trying to learn, fast typers (or spell-checkers) creating typos. or people trying to express themselves in English as a second language. Be kind. Writers know the best writing begins to appear in the second or third draft, and we don't have opportunity for that kind of revision in this ephemeral medium.

    • @videolad3057
      @videolad3057 4 роки тому +3

      @@channelfogg6629 And yet, his comment was infinitely richer than yours. Who'd have thunk it?

    • @PeterPepper93
      @PeterPepper93 4 роки тому

      @@VelocityWriting how refreshing it is to read such thing

    • @AnnaMaledonPictureBookAuthor
      @AnnaMaledonPictureBookAuthor 4 роки тому

      That is interesting. David Farland in his wonderful course on enchanting prose recalls his female reader who loved his book so much that she stayed up all night to finish reading it AND didn't even go to the toilet AND landed in hospital with urinal infection. So... yeah...good that you care for your readers. The danger is real.

  • @unicron2109
    @unicron2109 3 роки тому +12

    And now we have novels that read like they're written by copywriters - because they are written by copywriters.

  • @FrankPhillips1952
    @FrankPhillips1952 Рік тому +5

    Thank you for this series of how the great ones write.

  • @yonathanasefaw9001
    @yonathanasefaw9001 4 роки тому +10

    Thanks for this videos, I am a writer myself so this is pretty helpful. I tried reading Hemmingway's short stories and they are awkward to read (If I can remember correctly.) but I find Hemmingway's life fascinating.

    • @keywestdave3687
      @keywestdave3687 4 роки тому

      You will enjoy visiting the Hemingway Home and Museum someday. You will get a lot out of it.

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  4 роки тому +1

      Good reminder, Dave. I've been to the Hemingway Home and Museum in Key West. Writers will have a positive experience visiting the place where he lived and worked from 1931 to 1939. I've also visited a few of his hangouts in Paris.

  • @Calligraphybooster
    @Calligraphybooster 3 роки тому +5

    Hemingway is great. No doubts about that. But his rules are about dealing whith bad readers more than about what good writing is.

  • @tompalmer5986
    @tompalmer5986 3 роки тому +6

    I came across a sentence in William Faulkner's "The Bear" that was a page and a half long.

    • @jonnybleakley2238
      @jonnybleakley2238 3 роки тому +1

      i found Faulkner impenitaterable at times altho , despite this, i did appreciate the quality.

  • @bhangrafan4480
    @bhangrafan4480 4 роки тому +40

    What Hemingway is doing is giving the tips to create a punchy, impactful style of writing, like his own. It is just one style though. His 'rules' create a particular texture and ethos to a story which matched his themes and content. Other writers may wish to create a different texture and ethos to match their own content and preoccupations.

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  4 роки тому +8

      Thank you for your intelligent analysis and application. I have said this many times. You said it better.

  • @josenavas9968
    @josenavas9968 3 роки тому +1

    Very good advice. I was prepared to discard what you were about to say? After listening I found myself agreeing with you!
    "Keep it short and sweet"
    In today reality of texting. Keep one thoughts to 15 to 20 words so it can be read.

  • @TombstoneHeart
    @TombstoneHeart 3 роки тому

    I have learned, over the years, that in almost any artistic endeavour, it's not what you do that matters the most, but what you Don't do!
    I first realised this when watching the Band's documentary movie, "The Last Waltz". During a guitar solo in the blues song, "Further on up the Road", I was instantly taken with the little stops and pauses that Eric Clapton sprinkled through his playing. Later in life, I became aware of the concepts in music of creating tension by not playing and then resolving it with your playing. You don't have to play a million notes to impress anybody - sometimes you can do it by not playing at all!
    The English actor and raconteur, Peter Ustinov summed it up perfectly in a story about his most valuable lesson as a young stage actor. During rehearsals for a play, a very tall and imposing member of the cast strolled over to Ustinov and asked, "And what are you doing in this scene, my boy?"
    A very nervous Ustinov stammered, "Um..um..n..nothing."
    Suddenly the other actor, a Knight of the British Theatre, leaned in close to Ustinov and roared, "Oh no you don't - that's what I'm bloody well doing!"
    Hemingway's take on writing is bit like the joke about how to be a successful sculptor. All you have to do is get a big rock and chisel off all the bits that don't look like the subject of your sculpture. Absurd, but also strangely true.

  • @doctorartphd6463
    @doctorartphd6463 3 роки тому

    Yes...use short everything. Keep it simple. And keep refining your work to keep it sharp, crisp, and brief. Good luck.

  • @tophat2115
    @tophat2115 3 роки тому +5

    I don't want to arrest their attention, I want to vault them into the story, to experience it from the first word.

  • @car_carrie
    @car_carrie 3 роки тому +2

    Hemingway is amazing! Thank you for sharing these golden rules!

  • @honza97
    @honza97 3 роки тому +4

    Hi Velocity and thanks for the four rules. What the video lacked was listing the four excellent rules again at the end:)

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  3 роки тому +3

      I'm glad you received value from the video. Thank you for your comment. Back when I taught hour-long classes on the university level, I summarized points for students. You know, "Tell them what you're going to tell them, tell them, and then tell them what you told them." Should I do that for a 6-minute video? I think I would get complaints for being redundant. That's why I seldom do it in videos. People would leave because they would say, "You just said that" and not watch to the end. I offer expanded content for almost all of my videos and normally include a "round-up" in them. I appreciate what you're saying, but it is hard enough to retain eyes, and repeating myself will kill viewing time.

    • @honza97
      @honza97 3 роки тому +2

      @@VelocityWriting Hi & thanks for the answer. I see the conundrum, but I thought of just listing the four rules on a single page, without any further comment, at the end, as a summary, so that the interested listener can take one screenshot instead of four. - The rules are indeed worth gold!

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  3 роки тому +2

      Thanks Jan. You are not wrong. I agree with you. Others have too. A few have even listed the four rules in the comments. I always delete them because I think all "spoilers" (books, movies, etc.) do not deserve to be heard. I strongly believe in free speech, but am equally strong in my beliefs about bad manners. I invest a lot of time in my videos and spoilers are unwelcome. However, know that I've been rethinking the need for summaries in my videos, so your comment was valuable to me.

  • @dalee.manolakasauthorofleg7840
    @dalee.manolakasauthorofleg7840 6 років тому +8

    A wonderful review of Hemingway's style. Thank you. Dale E. Manolakas, Legal Thriller writer

  • @janderson8401
    @janderson8401 4 роки тому +1

    My high school chemistry teacher got me interested in Hemingway. I then read almost every book by Hemingway in the library. I still tend to binge read authors that I like.
    My own writing is limited to e-mails to customers and friends. I find that people stop reading after the first topic. If I start by telling a customer that I can start their job on Wednesday at 8:00a.m. and add that they could upgrade some feature for a certain amount, they will only remember that I will be there 8:00 a.m. Wednesday. If the order is reversed, they will reply yes or no to the upgrade and then ask when am I going to start.

  • @prabirgupta5059
    @prabirgupta5059 4 роки тому +1

    I think for these great writers the style of writing is married to the vision . For lesser mortals it’s not easy to follow their principles of writing. And Hemingway’s vision? As Norman Mailer says, he taught us to be brave in a bad world and to be ready to die alone. But a good video worth a watch

  • @viperphlyer4708
    @viperphlyer4708 3 роки тому +1

    Please take this as an observation, not a criticism. Following one's own advice is difficult, even for the great Hemingway. In the quote at the 5 minute mark, he says, "No man [...] can fail to write well if he abides with them." Given your interpretation of his fourth piece of advice, "be positive, not negative," I submit this sentence should be written, "Any man [...] will write well if he abides with them."

  • @garymorgan3742
    @garymorgan3742 3 роки тому +2

    True story. I was forced to write a number of term papers in college. One professor objected to my use of short sentences. He wrote that my paper was "too journalistic" and gave it a "B." I took it as a compliment -- his comment, not the grade.

  • @PhilJonesIII
    @PhilJonesIII 4 роки тому +11

    Short sentences: Neitzche! You listening?
    Be positive: "John died" becomes "John found himself without a care in the world".

  • @michaelmoreton5042
    @michaelmoreton5042 3 роки тому +8

    One that really bothers me, people will write about an experience , a meal for example and will say or write - "I was not disappointed" I hate that double negative.

  • @carl7221
    @carl7221 3 роки тому +2

    Oscar Wilde used a sentence 127 words long. So the idea of using short sentences is shot down immediately by an equally successful writer. I think the trick to be good at writing is simply, write a lot.

  • @LindaLinda80Linda
    @LindaLinda80Linda 3 роки тому +3

    History or Gertrude Stein whom Hemingway met in his twenties told him about his writing to, “Pare down!” Thus the Hemingway style was born!

    • @stevecarter8810
      @stevecarter8810 3 роки тому

      Compared to "pare down!", "use short sentences" is prolix.

  • @janerkenbrack3373
    @janerkenbrack3373 3 роки тому +1

    Positive writing simply puts the subject ahead of the predicate. I did the thing; vs. The thing was done by me. Orwell also covered this.

  • @theremixproject907
    @theremixproject907 3 роки тому +1

    Writing a personal memoir has taught many a scribe how memory actually does fade with age. Four shoe boxes of notes to the rescue. It all started with a 12th grade English assignment to write a detailed recollection of the important events and people in our lives up to that moment in time. "Since this class is reported to be the brightest with the highest IQ scores, there is a reasonable possibility that one two or three of you might write your memoir someday," we all laughed at the complimentary humour, "and the one two three or four of you will want to thank me far, far, far in the future, but I'm retiring at the end of this school year. Most of your ages are around 18 and I'm 67, so I'll be long, long gone by the time you stop joking about writing your memoir and start writing one." (Rest assured during your next rest cycle, knowing that Ms. Collins did not then ask us to do the math. It was an English class. Digression complete! )
    My 43 page type written, double spaced second draft has moved with me to at least 15 addresses. Over the years, Ms. Collins ingenious suggestions dictated an invaluable collection of memory jogging data which included every address I ever lived at, every phone number, names and phone numbers of every building manager, boss, work friends, staff lists, car salesmen, high school teachers, mentors, room mates, best friends, aunts, uncles, cousins and my bully list. Fifty-five years in four shoe boxes. So why is my up to the moment spillage turning into a Sci-Fi mystery reveal that has movie script potential? Nope. It's not about orifice-probing aliens from outer space.
    [ EDITED FOR YOU-TUBE AUDIENCE MEMBERS WITH SHORT TO NORMAL ATTENTION SPANS ]

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  3 роки тому

      I'm glad you are writing a personal memoir. It will be your legacy to your family and others. Also, it gives me the opportunity to plug my upcoming online course about how to write biographies for fun and profit. I have ghostwritten dozens of "autobiographies" for others and it is one of the most lucrative kinds of writing I have ever done. The course has not been released as of this date, but when it is, you can find it here: learn.velocitywriting.com/

  • @ancienbelge
    @ancienbelge 2 роки тому +7

    English has no grammatical case endings; hence, it is very easy to "get lost" in a complex English sentence, as the function of a word in the sentence is not obvious from word endings the way it is in German, Russian, or other inflected languages. A typical German or Dutch sentence may need to be split into 2-3 sentences in English.

  • @poodlenme
    @poodlenme 7 років тому +6

    Great tips! Hemingway was AWESOME!

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  7 років тому +2

      Yes, I agree. He seems to be under-appreciated by some today. Nevertheless, there is much for writers to learn from reading his books.

    • @toddboothbee1361
      @toddboothbee1361 4 роки тому +1

      @@VelocityWriting He remains among the best stylists of all time, despite the censorious politics of our time.

  • @ThePlataf
    @ThePlataf 4 роки тому +2

    I was taught, always write what you know about.
    And, be ruthless when pruning adverbs and adjectives.
    And use short words instead of long ones.

    • @ColombianThunder
      @ColombianThunder 4 роки тому

      Idk i just can't agree with that. I feel like taking much of that away removes all of its flavor

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  4 роки тому +2

      With respect, CThunder, you stand alone. That's not flavor, that's jetsam and flotsam that no one wants to read. Good writing does appear in first drafts. It becomes evident after all pruning has taken place.
      Great writers like Oscar Wilde, Eudora Welty, G.K. Chesterton, Chekov, Allen Ginsberg, and William Faulkner and many others advise pruning away adjectives, adverbs and and all those other things an author thinks adds flavor. It is called "Killing your darlings."
      Stephen King, in his book on writing, put it this way: “Kill your darlings, kill your darlings, even when it breaks your egocentric little scribbler's heart, kill your darlings.”

    • @ColombianThunder
      @ColombianThunder 4 роки тому

      @@VelocityWriting fair enough haha though again idk maybe you're right that i stand alone. I enjoy that kind of writing style. Maybe reading Inifinte Jest has gotten to my head since I've been stuck reading it for months, and that book is very wordy. Though that book is also controversial for that.

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  4 роки тому

      Ha! Your heart is in the right place if you like "Infinite Jest." I've been reading it for several years now. Not for the story, but the way David Foster Wallace triggers my creative juices. Reading a few pages sends my mind into hyperdrive. Also, I'm enchanted by a novel that has 388 footnotes. I would not say that Wallace is the benchmark for writing technique. His skills were more transcendent.

    • @ColombianThunder
      @ColombianThunder 4 роки тому

      @@VelocityWriting yes! DFW and his style is truly uniquely his and i fell in love with it haha. I'm still falling in love with it since I'm only about halfway done, and I'm constantly re-reading pages and going back. I appreciate your response! Gave me a much needed reason to suck it up, take a step back and "kill my darlings" haha. All best!

  • @Madhu2405
    @Madhu2405 3 роки тому +1

    Excellent episode. I am currently trying to overcome my block.

  • @KJKP
    @KJKP 6 років тому +24

    Excellent video. Worth watching.

  • @BaldwinBay
    @BaldwinBay 4 роки тому

    To Have and Have Not. Probably my favorite book of all time. In my opinion an awesome story. Incredible cast of characters. Terrific story about boaters.

  • @TheTheode
    @TheTheode 3 роки тому +4

    Hemingway’s 4 rules to writing like Hemingway.

  • @robertoalexandre4250
    @robertoalexandre4250 3 роки тому +1

    Great rules, when not thought of as holy script.
    The best way to learn to write, beside writing is: Read! Read! Read! Much more is learned by being a close, active reader of great writing (past and present) than by applying any rules or studying any manuals.

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  3 роки тому

      Wise advice. Pick the "rules" that best serves your art. We cannot ignore the rules that contribute to the success of others, but we must not accept them hook, line, and sinker. The best ways to formulate "rules" for yourself (other than my videos, of course!) is to read widely and adopt the aspects of the different authors that you most admire.

  • @maestrotv3351
    @maestrotv3351 4 роки тому +1

    I'd enjoying a lot about the concept of writing I learned more from you Mr. VelocityWriting I briefly open my curiosity in writing. thank you and Godbless

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  4 роки тому

      Thank you. Also, thank you for subscribing to my YT channel.

  • @funnyciscoleon
    @funnyciscoleon 3 роки тому

    Hemingway has eluded me throughout my younger years. My ignorance towards great writers has been magnanimous. Only now, in my fourth decade have I chosen to let their work infest my brain. Best decision of my reading life.

  • @matthewtrevino525
    @matthewtrevino525 6 років тому +4

    I quite like the jazziness of prose and over all Transcendent language. My tip for writing if I may be so bold is life experiences, get out of the grid and routine. You won't regret that.

  • @SebastianS72
    @SebastianS72 4 роки тому +1

    Nothing what I never heard before, but a very good explanation video. TY

  • @nelsonx5326
    @nelsonx5326 3 роки тому +11

    I've started writing in short sentences. Can you tell? I wrote some long sentences to see if I could do it. The longest was 250 words. I see it as an exercise in grammar.

  • @devonboulden2496
    @devonboulden2496 6 років тому +10

    I went back a few months ago to reread one of Hemingway's novels. It's quite a thing to read an artist's work when you are young and to bring all that extra baggage back to their work over the years. The rhythms of the work felt awkward and it was hard for me to get into it. Is it possible for literary tastes to change so much over the years? I'm certainly more critical of what I read now, but Hemingway was one of the authors that got me interested in literature.
    Also the advice about an good opening paragraph is simply cliche. It's the easiest thing to tell a novice and it's a great way to make them crazy. Is this opening interesting enough? Has it been overdone? Is there a better way to tell it? Shouldn't someone die in the first paragraph? What about starting it with a mystery? Maybe it should be like a Michael Bay movie and have a slow motion explosion in the opening paragraph.

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  6 років тому +9

      Thank you for the thoughtful observations. Yes, both literature and literary tastes change for individuals and society. Remember, Hemingway is heralded as the greatest 20th century novelist and we have moved on. He broke new ground, but others are doing that now.
      For example, you point out that saying a good opening sentence is "simply cliche." That advice was new and fresh with Hemingway. He broke new ground that seems ordinary today. Oscar Wilde was considered the greatest 19th century popular writer in English by many people. He started "The Picture of Dorian Gray" with about a 125 word opening sentence. Some 18th and 19th century fiction had opening sentences that ran several pages. So, you have to keep these things in context.
      Hemingway was an exceptional writer. We call all learn from his approach and his sensibilities.

    • @celticpridedrums
      @celticpridedrums 4 роки тому +2

      remember even the Nobel committee has subjective views; bob Dylan won for his songs--he was so surprised, for 6 months he refused to believe the award was nothing more than a hoax; Alice Munro won the Nobel. have you read her short stories? absolute nonsense.

    • @antoniamills3000
      @antoniamills3000 4 роки тому +1

      Yes, definitely...tastes in reading do change. We change as we mature so i suppose it's natural...

    • @vernonchikchadwick8187
      @vernonchikchadwick8187 4 роки тому +2

      Rule (5): Call the unamazing amazing. That's how mediocrity advertises itself in the business of writing.
      Rule (6): Strain for effect in your opening paragraph. That's how to grab the attention of readers who have no business reading in the first place (see Rule 5 above).

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  4 роки тому +1

      Sorry, you're a little too cynical for me. You are entitled to your opinion, but I'd say you are going 100 mph/kph down a dead-end street. Our job as communicators is to encode data (write) in a way so readers can easily decode our word symbols (read) them so that an exchange of consciousness takes place. A superficial elitism like yours will not change hearts and minds.

  • @jeffhodge7333
    @jeffhodge7333 3 роки тому +1

    A first draft gets you 80% there. A rewrite gets you 90% there. An edit gets you 95% there, and that's where you stop. Beyond that, it's diminished returns. If you go for perfection, you will never finish. You may not even start. In sailing, being 80% undersail is optimal. The same is true with life and baseball.

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  3 роки тому

      Yes, there is wisdom in what you say about the writing/revision/editing process. Perfectionism is a curse, not a virtue. My favorite quote on this comes from football coach Vince Lombardi. He said, "Perfection is not attainable, but if we chase perfection we can catch excellence."

  • @vaunmalone3064
    @vaunmalone3064 3 роки тому +1

    When I first read somerset Maugham - there is sparsity in the writing - yes, short sentences!

  • @firebear369
    @firebear369 3 роки тому +3

    Getting ready for NaNoWriMo and stumbled upon this. I love this!

  • @RobertSJHu
    @RobertSJHu 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge of writing tips from Ernest Hemingway !!!! Gratefully, Robert S.J. Hu September 8, 2020.

  • @michaeltellurian825
    @michaeltellurian825 4 роки тому +1

    And then there's his peer, Faulkner, who sometimes wrote a sentence that went on for a page. Known for his convoluted, dense style, Faulkner also won the Nobel, in 1949. Then there's Cormac McCarthy who uses very little punctuation. The point is, there are many ways to build a house...post-and-beam, stone, stick-framing, etc. The question is, after determining that the structure is sound and will last a hundred years, "Does it feel like home?" If Hemingway's stories resonate with you then imitate his style. If not, don't. Learn from someone else. There's a lot of writers to choose from here on this channel. Thank you, sir, for your work!

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  4 роки тому +1

      Yes, I agree with much of what you say. Yet, we cannot merely pick the style we like and mimic that. We have those pesky readers to deal with! Reading styles should inform our writing styles if we wish to sell our work.

    • @michaeltellurian825
      @michaeltellurian825 4 роки тому

      @@VelocityWriting Good point!

  • @gristlevonraben
    @gristlevonraben 4 роки тому +6

    From one extreme to the other. It's these types of books that made reading tedious in school, think about that.

    • @SamlovesLulu
      @SamlovesLulu 3 роки тому +1

      I agree completely. Why don't grammar/english teachers use Tolkien, or Lewis, or any number of other such examples of highly acclaimed writers, to teach kids? Why is the work of Clemens (or, "Twain", if you prefer), who (most excellently, I admit) writes of times no average student can relate to, still mandatory reading for elementary students? My dad got me interested in reading by introducing me to "The Hobbit"... he read the first few chapters to me then told me I'd have to read the rest myself. I started reading then, and never stopped.
      I have always found Hemmingway to be rather pedantic and depressing. Long ago, I read "Crime and Punishment"... once I got used to the stylistic eccentricities of the work, and was able to somewhat place myself mentally in the times and circumstances of the story, I found that book to be far more captivating than anything I ever read by Hemmingway.
      Far too much of what passes for education is left to the devices of automatons and bureaucrats. Programmed courses planned by committees far removed from life, or even from the typical classroom.

    • @Franklinveterinarycenter1of4
      @Franklinveterinarycenter1of4 3 роки тому

      @@SamlovesLulu Yes! I got hooked on reading after "the hobbit". I believe it was 8th or 9th grade reading requirement. I remember enjoying tscarlet letter requirement in 10th grade. 12th grade was Shakespeare's verse memorization. I disliked senior year English literature.

  • @Luxsky
    @Luxsky 3 роки тому +12

    Regardless of the length of his sentences, Oscar Wilde is not a tedious writer. Otherwise, a very enjoyable video.

  • @dionyates2482
    @dionyates2482 6 років тому +78

    I wouldn't say The Picture of Dorian Gray had a 'tedious' writing style, though Wilde's writing was decadent and florid...

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  6 років тому +21

      Thanks for your comment, Dion. Yes, Wilde's florid aspect has its charm. But many today find it tedious, especially when compared to Hemingway's lean style. Some might say that Wilde reached the epitome of 19th century floridness. Hemingway was the pioneer of the sparse, modern 20th century style which has become common in our own century.

    • @redbloodbluemoon1423
      @redbloodbluemoon1423 3 роки тому +4

      @Mark Jones yes, precisely.

    • @Johnny-mp2ew
      @Johnny-mp2ew 3 роки тому +3

      Of course...
      But most people are not Oscar Wilde.

    • @historyandhorseplaying7374
      @historyandhorseplaying7374 3 роки тому +3

      Wilde’s writing was neither decadent nor florid, rather, it was simply what some might call a pastoral sojourn amongst the lillies of the field, as they stretch out like waves upon the seas of prairies that dot our fair lands, but not stark and desiccated, rather, warm and pluvial as a newborn’s pate, filling the pages and chapters like running water fills the ruts and potholes of the roads that spiderweb through Yorkshire, guiding and sending their teeming merchants to and fro, like ants on their busy journeys, always industrious, always determined.

  • @thatoneuser8600
    @thatoneuser8600 3 роки тому +3

    4:08 this rule can be further summed up as "Eschew litotes".

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  3 роки тому +2

      "Litotes." Every writer should learn the definition of this word if they don't already know it.

  • @Nautilus1972
    @Nautilus1972 3 роки тому +2

    As King points out Hemingway's strength in On Writing : "He came to the river. And the river was there."

  • @mubashirhassan614
    @mubashirhassan614 Рік тому +1

    Appreciate sir ! On monday myy paper is going to be excellent thanks to u sirr ❤️

  • @jamesdalessandro1120
    @jamesdalessandro1120 3 роки тому

    "...vigorous language..." is the key. Short sentences help. But in any medium: fiction, journalism, song lyrics (think Bob Dylan), it is searing, indelible images that carry the moment.

  • @sulatlalaki
    @sulatlalaki 3 роки тому

    When I was English 102, the English Department Head had us, first day of class, write an extemporaneous paper. We did. We turned in our papers and when the class next met the professor returned our papers, graded. I was the only one who received a passing grade--B+ with the comment "Good style." He later said, Mr. Pruett you have a good style but you tend to be wordy. However, your wordiness is critical to your style. If there's any way you can cut down on your words without ruining your style, do it." I've struggled with this ever since. It's taken me 40 years to maintain a style that is--perhaps--interesting BECAUSE of my 'wordiness.'

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  3 роки тому

      Your professor gave you good advice. But I understand your dilemma. Wordiness is usually a bad habit except in those cases when it comes across as a stroke of genius. It is often hard to know when to write with precision, and when to let it flow. Personally, I have spent my entire writing life "tightening it up." :-)

  • @zigaudrey
    @zigaudrey 4 роки тому

    I love the minimalist. It's hard to study in the French language.
    This style reminds me of comic books and cinema. Dominance of Actions and Dialogues, Attention to Small Details and Focus on Present (Scenes) [Biography and Flash-Back belongs to Past, Vision, Question (What he is going to do?) and Condition (If... Else) to Future]
    You have to use before and even after elements to understand what is behind the lines.
    For amusement, I took extracts from book and rewrite them in minimalist style. With or without the redundant, we have the same story.
    "He can't resist to blush" becomes "He blushes". One need an emotional investment, the other already did it.
    Ernest Hemingway teaches to treats words as tool of description, not as a tool of word play.
    One thing is important: story focuses on the plot. Don't distract the reader.

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  4 роки тому +1

      You say, "For amusement, I took extracts from book and rewrite them in minimalist style." Let me say, that is more than amusement. It is a commonly overlooked way to enhance their writing skills.
      In the old classic schools of art, students were encouraged to copy great paintings. That is how they developed their eye and improved their techniques, which they later applied to their own unique paintings.
      Sadly, writers do not do the same thing. They are fearful of the fake monster called "plagiarism." That fear has a chilling effect on creativity. However, I want to encourage you to rewrite the work of great writers and learn from the experience. You have been doing that with your minimalist approach and I urge you to continue. Apply what you learn to your own unique work.

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  4 роки тому

      Great artists steal? If so, it's how they do it. And if they do it correctly, it's not stealing. I wrote this a year or more ago. velocitywriting.com/plagiarism-in-creative-context/

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  4 роки тому

      Thank you for reading my article linked above. I'm repurposing it into a YT video that will be available soon. Yes, as you see, both "stealing ideas" and "self-plagiarism" are completely absurd concepts. Academics are being manipulative by connecting the evolution of thought to "honesty." Of course, such notions have a chilling effect on creative writing, and that is unconscionable.

  • @eatzandeatz
    @eatzandeatz 3 роки тому

    Excellent video about Hemingway's writing style. I love it.

  • @TeleNikon
    @TeleNikon 3 роки тому +1

    I also heard that Hemingway liked to get hammered before writing.

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  3 роки тому +1

      That's a myth. Please scroll down through these comments to get a link to the facts.

    • @TeleNikon
      @TeleNikon 3 роки тому +1

      @@VelocityWriting - Thanks for the heads-up

  • @bpmca69
    @bpmca69 3 роки тому +2

    A lot of sage advice, but I would like to focus on the single point I think requires clarification. Using short sentences - what does that mean exactly? In high school, "For sale: baby shoes never worn." was held up as an example of great, compact writing. However, for me, as a teacher of writing and a daily practitioner, I have always preached variety in sentence structure. A short sentence carries impact, but I don't always want impact. Hemingway was indeed one of the best in terms of putting one word after another, but my vote for the greatest writer of the 20th century PG Wodehouse. A writer second only to Shakespeare in my mind. Thanks for the video. TTFN

  • @lucascaua77
    @lucascaua77 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you! Greetings from Brazil!

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  4 роки тому +1

      Welcome! Thanks for visiting. Did you subscribe and click the bell? More good stuff coming. :-)

    • @lucascaua77
      @lucascaua77 4 роки тому +1

      @@VelocityWriting Yeah, I did

  • @murtadah6327
    @murtadah6327 4 роки тому

    Thank you so much for posting this informative/educative video on writing; that too, the tips coming from the best writer, Ernest Hemingway.

  • @veritas6335
    @veritas6335 5 років тому +2

    Get the title right. One bell. Ernest took the title from a John Donne quote:
    “.....any man’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind, and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee. “
    If memory serves, this quote is printed on the opening page, opposite the first page of the text.

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  5 років тому +6

      Input always appreciated, Socrate. If you look at the very top post, which I added a year ago at this writing, I apologized for my verbal typo. You must have overlooked my apology, but it's there and it's sincere. Maybe we could take the "s" from my misspoken "bells" and add it to your name. It's Socrates to most of the world, not Socrate. :-)

  • @josephkelley8641
    @josephkelley8641 2 роки тому

    Thanks DL been following this Hemingway advice for a long time
    (since after grad school). Made me a much better writer - and just as
    importantly? A lot EASIER read!
    Re: short sentences and paragraphs. Mine USED to be like the long
    and winding road! Great piece DL

  • @johnnybgoodeish
    @johnnybgoodeish 3 роки тому +3

    Another piece of Hemmingway writing advice is to write drunk but always edit sober! :)

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  3 роки тому +2

      Whether meant to be humorous or not, this is a myth that never seems to die. Please scroll down in these comments to see the one where I share factual data that debunks the myth.

    • @johnnybgoodeish
      @johnnybgoodeish 3 роки тому +1

      Kia ora,@@VelocityWriting thank you for your correction. I embarrassingly find myself acting like some old fishwife passing off some gossip as truth. I guess the expression is that some stories have 'legs' whether they are true or not. That is probably why that old Hemmingway soundbite is still expressed. Have now subscribed :)

    • @VelocityWriting
      @VelocityWriting  3 роки тому +3

      Yes, the Internet is a powerful engine for spreading falsehoods of all kinds. We all get snared if we are not careful. As writers, I say we should work to cancel that and seek truth and kindness instead. Thanks for subscribing and becoming part of this whānau.

  • @maheshyadav993
    @maheshyadav993 3 роки тому

    Wonderful Video! Thanks for sharing your ideas!