Wearily, I stared at the blindingly, achingly empty void that was the white screen of Microsoft Word. I tried vainly to come up with an entertainingly, informatively, and completely original way of demonstrating how constantly writers turn to vaguely descriptive adverbs as a short-cut. Ingeniously, insidiously, and mischievously I contemplated an opening paragraph full of these tritely clichéd and unnecessarily inserted –ly adverbs just to prove my point. One paragraph down, two to go, I thought smugly.
More than anything
else, it was Stephen King’s On Writing
that provided me with my “Ah-ha!” moment concerning –ly adverbs. King is a
writer I admire tremendously, and so I took his advice to heart despite having
no doubt heard that same piece of advice many times before. But why hate on
those harmless little adverbs? The reason behind the advice is that many
inexperienced writers over-use these adverbs in place of good description. This
is most often the case in dialogue attribution, where the –ly adverb is thrown
in to add some spice or explain to the reader how a line was said. However,
nine times out of ten, you will find that if you write your dialogue well,
choosing the best words in the best order, then the reader will hear the proper tone as they read it.
So, should –ly and other adverbs be banned from all writing?
Of course not, like all elements of language, they serve a purpose and can
bring color and zing to your prose. The key is to think of them like strong
spices in the cabinet and use them sparingly and appropriately (like I just
did). My practice is to write my first draft and then, when I go back,
eliminate all the –ly’s and other weak adverbs that aren’t necessary to my
sentences. If I can’t understand how something is happening without them, then
they stay, but most times I find that I can cut all the quickly’s, suddenly’s,
immediately’s, and other such false-excitement words out without loosing
anything.
My name is Brian Patrick McKinley and my first novel is called Ancient Blood: A Novel of the Hegemony. The Chermasu, and Monsters.
His Amazon Author Page: http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B0085QCYUA
His Amazon Author Page: http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B0085QCYUA
Find him on Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5222848.Brian_Patrick_McKinley
His Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/brian.mckinley.13
Ancient Blood's Facebook Page: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Ancient-Blood-A-Novel-of-The-Hegemony/393476997370425
1 comment:
brian, do you remember me? Dejah Britton....I wrote about the 'Aviants'....
I'll check back to see if you get this comment...
Post a Comment