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Writing With Power: Techniques for Mastering the Writing Process [Paperback]

Peter Elbow
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)

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Book Description

July 9, 1998 0195120183 978-0195120189 2
A classic handbook for anyone who needs to write, Writing With Power speaks to everyone who has wrestled with words while seeking to gain power with them. Here, Peter Elbow emphasizes that the essential activities underlying good writing and the essential exercises promoting it are really not difficult at all.

Employing a cookbook approach, Elbow provides the reader (and writer) with various recipes: for getting words down on paper, for revising, for dealing with an audience, for getting feedback on a piece of writing, and still other recipes for approaching the mystery of power in writing. In a new introduction, he offers his reflections on the original edition, discusses the responses from people who have followed his techniques, how his methods may differ from other processes, and how his original topics are still pertinent to today's writer. By taking risks and embracing mistakes, Elbow hopes the writer may somehow find a hold on the creative process and be able to heighten two mentalities--the production of writing and the revision of it.

From students and teachers to novelists and poets, Writing with Power reminds us that we can celebrate the uses of mystery, chaos, nonplanning, and magic, while achieving analysis, conscious control, explicitness, and care in whatever it is we set down on paper.

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Writing With Power: Techniques for Mastering the Writing Process + Writing without Teachers + Vernacular Eloquence: What Speech Can Bring to Writing
Price for all three: $38.80

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Whatever your reason for writing, Peter Elbow has a "recipe" to guide you. A longtime proponent of "freewriting" (writing without stopping, for a preset amount of time), Elbow incorporates its use in a variety of ways. Have a limited amount of time? Spend half of it freewriting and half of it cleaning up your prose. Got all the time in the world (and only a vague sense of what you want to say)? Freewrite, then focus, then freewrite, then focus, repeatedly, until you get "a trustworthy vision of your final piece of writing." Elbow offers a plethora of prompts for priming the creative pump, as well as several ways to revise the piece of writing that results: thorough revising, revising with feedback, cutting and pasting, proofreading, and the like. He pays close attention to the ways in which focusing on an audience can assist or interfere in the writing process, including a terrific chapter on the strangeness of writing for teachers, in which "your task is usually to explain what you are still engaged in trying to understand to someone who understands it better." And he provides an excellent section on how to solicit the kind of feedback you want. Though it is a new edition of a 1981 book, there is nothing tired about Writing with Power: it provides many tools to help a writer feel empowered throughout the writing process. --Jane Steinberg

Review

"Students for the first time are excited about being able to transform their thoughts into clear language with a new found confidence."--Alan Dernalowicz, Mount Wachusett Community College

Praise for the previous edition: "Page after page, chapter after chapter, Peter Elbow gives direct and down-to-earth advice for beginning writers."--Teachers and Writers

"A practical handbook for anyone who needs to write."--The Boston Globe

"A valuable aid for those who need to write who are hindered by lack of tools needed to successfully complete such a task on a day-to-day basis."--Gary Douglas, WITC

Product Details

  • Paperback: 416 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA; 2 edition (July 9, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0195120183
  • ISBN-13: 978-0195120189
  • Product Dimensions: 5.3 x 0.8 x 8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #14,592 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
52 of 52 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars It worked for me! January 31, 2006
Format:Paperback
It seems as if writing books can roughly be divided in two categories. First, there are the books that tell you to plan your writing project in advance in meticulous detail. Second, there are books that tell you NOT to plan anything in advance, but urge you to start writing until you drop.

Elbow's book is in the second category. Though it seems as if his method of "freewriting" leads you nowhere, the book helped me tremendously. Elbow describes several techniques, all of which can be of help (including the planned writing strategy) to those who have to write stuff. However, his own tack is what he calls the "loop writing" process. During this process, one blends freewriting techniques with more directed writing techniques. The emphasis, however, is on the creativity stimulated by freewriting. The reason why Elbow emphasizes freewriting is extremely simple, and by experience I know it to be true.

Elbow writes that when we write we tend to be our own critic. We evaluate immediately what we write, we edit on the fly, and therefore get stuck rather quickly. Elbow urges us to leave the editing until a later time, and simply start writing whatever comes to mind. You can always throw out stuff later. That way, you'll create a work flow, that is beneficial to your creativity. Just read the book and Elbow's wonderful advice, and see if this works for you as it did for me.

I took Elbow's advice seriously in my scholarly writing (I am a philosopher of religion and theologian at Leiden University, the Netherlands). Elbow's book was a real source of inspiration and made writing a lot of fun. At this stage, I have finished a 250-page book (which will be published in two months with one of the major Dutch publishing companies), and several articles. I don't claim it will work for everybody, but it certainly worked for me. Just read the book and try it - if it doesn't work for you, at least you've read a wonderful book!
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74 of 77 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Worth it, I promise. August 22, 2002
Format:Paperback
I have been an ardent reader all my life, as far back as I can remember. I can remember tearing through my bookcase on some days as if I was physically hungry. Books were always a source of enjoyment for me, - better than dreaming, man - but they were also always a mystery to me. How could someone do something like this? Where do people find all this incredible material inside? Reading was my joy. Writing was never that. Instead, it was always difficult, and frustrating and humiliating. Oh, my writing was all right when it was done. But it took hours piled on hours of struggle to get there. I didn't understand how writers did it, how they could create entire novels - and not just one to each author! - when it took me a week to write one silly page for a book report. And not only did it take forever; it was never fun. It was hard and brutal, exacting and costly. I thought that when you wrote something it had to come out perfect, or nearly so, the first time it was copied down.

Everything changed. This book did it for me. I read Elbow's advice on freewriting to create, how trying to edit and originate at the same time choked the spark off before it could get started. Writing freely without excruciating over what word to put where, then going back after you had some material to work with - it was revelatory. More; for the first time in my life, writing was fun. Really, really fun. It's stayed that way, in all the time since I read "Writing With Power." If I'm very lucky, it will become what I do with my life - but it is only for reading this book that I have any shot at all.

If you have any ambition at all to write, if you have ever experienced the frustration of knowing you have something to say without knowing how to say it, read this book. And start writing, right now. Just make sure you don't stop. You can always go back later.

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32 of 33 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Before reading Elbow's book, I was quite skeptical concerning "freewriting" -- raw writing, writing without concern for the rules of grammar, writing for the sheer sake of getting words on paper. Elbow overcame my skepticism with powerful examples, reports from his own experience & that of his pupils, and clever exposition. Rather than ducking the complexities and contradictions of good writing, Elbow tackles them head-on. His strategy involves aggressively seeking counter-arguments to his suggestions, and he often admits that two opposing principles both contain elements of truth. He then gives thoughtful advice on how to cope with such complexity. Many of his guidelines involve dialectical or cyclical practices, e.g. paying attention to breathing life into your prose, but then revising for structure, and then returning once again to make sure you haven't choked the life out of what you've written.

In combination with Robert Boice's book, First-Order Principles for College Teachers, Elbow's book would make a wonderful present for a beginning academic or other professional whose livelihood depends on good writing. Graduate students in all fields would also benefit. And, of course, people who TEACH writing could find much of value in this book. Elbow, however, seems to have a dim view of many of his colleagues' tactics!

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars This book can help writers at any level
Elbow's discussion of the importance of writing clearly is the best I have read. He put into words how most writers feel about writing, at whatever level they perform. Read more
Published 4 days ago by American Scribe
5.0 out of 5 stars great product
book was bought as used and was practically new Amazons standards are the best.I use them for all my research text.
Published 17 days ago by Scott Macklin
5.0 out of 5 stars So You Think You Want to Be a Writer?
Elbow's book is my favorite text not only for writers, but for anyone who needs to write. Elbow explains his own tortuous journey to good writing, admitting that the only way he... Read more
Published 5 months ago by D. R. Ransdell
2.0 out of 5 stars Writing with Power
I just didn't click with the writer of this book. It's chock full in fine print, full of a lot of info; I just didn't care for it.
Published 5 months ago by Robyn D. Elam
3.0 out of 5 stars stvpaulsonwriter
This is a good book. But rather than answering my questions, it only created new ones for me based on the things that the author stated that really made no sense at all! Read more
Published 16 months ago by stvpaulsonwriter
2.0 out of 5 stars For a book on writing, it is a disgrace that the Kindle version has so...
This is not about the book, but about the typo-ridden Kindle version of the book.
Let "rne" explore instead of let "me" explore?! Read more
Published on March 15, 2011 by Lynn
3.0 out of 5 stars Creating and Criticizing: The One-Two of Effective Writing
Experienced writer Peter Elbow takes issue with "the dangerous method" of writing: trying to turn out a good written product at one sitting. Read more
Published on October 5, 2010 by John M. Ford
5.0 out of 5 stars Elbow's Grease
This book is filled with very useful advice for any one who wants to improve their writing. I found myself nodding in agreement with many of Elbow's suggestions since I already... Read more
Published on August 12, 2010 by bronx book nerd
5.0 out of 5 stars Very Good
I loved this book! After reading Elbow's first book Writing with Teachers I would have been wary of getting this book, only I bought them at the same time. Read more
Published on January 30, 2010 by S. Young
5.0 out of 5 stars Easy to understand, relatable.
This book teaches you several ways to get over writers block and to become a better writer overall. It uses a lot of examples that the reader can relate to. Read more
Published on September 27, 2009 by Binh N. Vu
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