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TITLE: Writer's Digest Magazine
["America's Leading Writer's Magazine" -- See FULL contents below!]
ISSUE DATE:
April 1999; Vol. 79, No. 4
CONDITION:
Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)
IN THIS ISSUE:
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FEATURES:
Rounding up Great Quotes
By Sue Campbell
Putting together a quote roundup isn't as easy as it looks. First, you've got to find the right people. Then you have to get them to say quotable things. Listen up as we spill the secrets for lassoing the perfect quotes and anecdotes.
The Profiler
Interview by John Solomon
David Remnick is the editor of The New Yorker, but he's also a prolific profile writer. Learn his techniques for crafting these pieces magazines hunger for. Plus, a hands-on exercise that will help you put Reminck's techniques to work for you.
Art Is in the Detail
By Lauren Kessler
Not all details are created equal. The right ones will elevate your articles to, well, art. How do you know which details are the ones you want? Easy--observe your subjects. An expert shows you how.
Not Necessarily the Newsstand
By Elizabeth Larsen
Ready to blaze a trail to some bylines? A former Utne Reader editor shows you how to look bwyond the newsstand.
By Lisa Milbrand
11 Commandments for Writing Queries
They aren't carved into stone tablets, but these query-writing musts can lead to rock-solid assignments.
Here's Lookin' at You, Kid
By Michael Seidman
Let your readers experience your fiction's world through your characters' eyes by weaving
description into your prose.
Writing Clinic: Keeping Your Voice Under Control
By David King
A strong, distinctive voice is an asset to your fiction, but it becomes a problem when you let it
take over your story. Our book doctor has a few tips for making sure you're taking the right tone.
COLUMNS.
FICTION Nancy Kress on unreliable narrators.
SCRIPTS Cynthia Whitcomb on three-act structure.
NONFICTION David A. Fryxell on hand-me-down assignments. DEPARTMENTS.
LETTERS.
THE WRITING LIFE This month: Maeve Binchy, a skewed look at writer's block, poetry-writing tips and Your Assignment.
THE MARKETS These aren't your father's men's magazines. Plus, the managing editor of Chicago Magazine tells you how to break into his pages, and mag listings galore.
CHRONICLE Without an editorial net, this writer found herself creating stronger fiction.
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