Saturday, September 29, 2018
How to Write the Perfect Sentence
At Lithub, we find an excerpt from Joe Moran’s new book, First You Write a Sentence: The Elements of Reading, Writing … and Life. It first appeared in The Guardian. Here are a couple of typical paragraphs—insightful, worth your time, poetic, and perhaps a bit heady.
A sentence is much more than its literal meaning. It is a living line of words where logic and lyric meet – a piece of both sense and sound, albeit the sound is only heard in the reader’s head. Rookie sentence-writers are often too busy worrying about the something they are trying to say and don’t worry enough about how that something looks and sounds. They look straight past the words into the meaning that they have strong-armed into them. They fasten on content and forget about form – forgetting that content and form are the same thing, that what a sentence says is the same as how it says it.
If a writer’s sentences have enough life and interest in them – with “every step an arrival”, as Rainer Maria Rilke put it – they will hold the reader and move the writing along. The writing finds a hidden unity that has no need of the mucilage of linking phrases. Each sentence is like a tidal island that looks cut off until, at low tide, a causeway to the mainland appears. A good lesson for any writer: make each sentence worth reading, and something in it will lead the reader into the next one. Good writers write not just in sentences but with sentences. Get them right and everything else solves itself or ceases to matter.
You can read more here.
(ljs)
https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/legal_skills/2018/09/how-to-write-the-perfect-sentence.html