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How to Write Like a Writer: A Sharp and Subversive Guide to Ignoring Inhibitions, Inviting Inspiration, and Finding Your True Voice
Audible Audiobook
– Unabridged
The New York Times bestselling author of the beloved classic How to Read Literature Like a Professor teaches you how to write everything from a report for your community association to a meaningful memoir in this masterful and engaging guide.
Combing anecdotes and hard-won lessons from decades of teaching and writing—and invoking everyone from Hemingway to your third-grade teacher—retired professor Thomas C. Foster guides you through the basics of writing. With How to Write Like a Writer you’ll learn how to organize your thoughts, construct first drafts, and (not incidentally) keep you in your chair so that inspiration can come to visit.
With warmth and wit, Foster shows you how to get into (and over) your best self, how to find your voice, and how to know when, if ever, a piece of work is done.
Packed with enlightening anecdotes, highlighted with lists and bullet points, this invaluable guide reveals how writers work their magic, and reminds us that we all—for better or worse, whether we mean to or not—are known by what we put on paper or screen, both our thoughts and our words.
Supplemental enhancement PDF accompanies the audiobook.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.
- Listening Length8 hours and 12 minutes
- Audible release dateSeptember 6, 2022
- LanguageEnglish
- ASINB09NF1YQY7
- VersionUnabridged
- Program TypeAudiobook
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Product details
| Listening Length | 8 hours and 12 minutes |
|---|---|
| Author | Thomas C. Foster |
| Narrator | David de Vries |
| Whispersync for Voice | Ready |
| Audible.com Release Date | September 06, 2022 |
| Publisher | HarperAudio |
| Program Type | Audiobook |
| Version | Unabridged |
| Language | English |
| ASIN | B09NF1YQY7 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #65,031 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals) #50 in Literature Encyclopedias #68 in Literary History & Criticism Reference #154 in Literary History & Criticism |
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The intended audience, he tells us, is important. Dr. Foster’s target is reluctant writers, those students, and professionals who must write but would rather not. Mostly then, this is about non-fiction, from book reviews, eulogies, letters, journalism, and legal briefs to theses. But the fictionalist should not, for that reason, ignore the book. Many of Foster’s examples are taken from literature and a long career encompassing almost every sort of writing imaginable. His observations on the overall writing process, the high-level structure of a work, and on down to the paragraph and sentence apply equally to fiction and non-fiction.
On social media, many writers of fiction bemoan what they call “imposter syndrome.” These are people who want to write, sometimes even enjoy the process, but despair of ever being “good enough.” For those writers (and yes, if you write, you are a writer), Dr. Foster has a whole chapter and many observations scattered throughout the book.
It is good from time to time to be reminded of all the many steps that can, ultimately, yield one’s best possible (never perfect) piece of writing. Few writers (especially me) will employ every step, but adding a few to your process, whatever it is, cannot help but make you a better writer.
It’s not a write this genre or that kind of book. It’s not focused on one element like plot or dialog or characterization. It serves more as a view from 50,000 feet kind of guide, briefly looking at a bit of everything. For someone starting out, that’s ideal.
The writing style is excellent — conversational and engaging. The narration is fantastic.
However, customer expectations with writing books are that they're fiction-focused unless stated otherwise, and the marketing and sales material did not make it clear that this book really isn't a book on fiction writing, and to say the book helps all types of writing really isn't true since several chapters are only non-fiction and academic research focused. Ultimately, I didn't buy what I expected but I still got value from it.
I wasn’t paying attention in school and suffered from the boring old formats.
The author compelled me to see that I will learn from exercising my abilities and better understand my writing with practice. Also that failure can teach me a lot. I need to to a lot more thinking and practicing. I love the “reading journal” and “practice rewriting news paper articles” for practice.
I could go on and on but I just say that I found it helpful.
I’m no writer nor will be, but I’ve definitely been inspired to try. I highly recommend it for anyone looking for some solid insight.
Thanks Harper Perennial via NetGalley.
My favorite quote:
“All writing is an act of imagination. Use yours. Discover or invent the best way to say what it is you have to say in your writing. Don’t write the way you think a book would have you do it. Write the way you think and feel will best do the job.”














