Friday, August 21, 2020

Descriptive Writing and Finding Your Topic

Descriptive Writing and Finding Your TopicFor descriptive writing, I think the most important step is first finding a topic. There are many topics that will serve as the basis for good writing and you can use many of them as starting points. But you have to be creative with your topic and then ask yourself the question, 'What does this topic mean to me?'You want to create or expand upon the theme of an introduction or to do a lot of introductory paragraphs. Your narrative writing will look something like this: how it feels to be 'this' by this experience and to be caught up in this 'life.' You need to focus on the state of being involved with the topic.While you are interested in the subject, it's a good idea to include a plot, since not everyone has time to read a book page-by-page. Often you will find that you are immediately attracted to the book when you first pick it up. Thus, the plan is to keep the reader's attention by presenting the action with all of the pertinent informati on at the start of the book.Describe the action in terms of what is being read and the time frame of the events. Tell how the event affects those present and how the audience feels about the situation. The description should lead you toward the right conclusion. It is important to remember that your writing is a series of events, not a collection of isolated facts.The best descriptions do not involve the writer identifying things. For example, if you read something about an important date and then write 'the date was May 22nd,' you are writing descriptive writing. However, if you remember what the date was, but you write 'there was a big party, you remember who came, and you remember all the fun, you don't feel so real. 'you are describing a very different genre.Writers make a decision about the quality of their work on the basis of their expectations. People who do not meet their expectations will not be very happy. Expectations can be positive or negative. It is not necessary to b e overly excited about the subject matter when you have not written much descriptive fiction, even if you think it is the type of writing you enjoy.When you do begin to write, write in the first person. This may sound odd, but it is actually more convincing and will be easier for readers to read and interpret. In general, the audience wants to know how it feels to be reading the story, not how the writer feels about the subject.It is usually best to make a document that is a complete story. The author then chooses a topic that matches that story and then goes on to write the rest of the book. I have seen this approach done quite well and it keeps the author writing about the right topic.

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