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| Foreword | p. xi |
| Preface | p. xxi |
| Rewrite Before Writing | p. 1 |
| Why Do We Resist Rewriting? | p. 2 |
| An Invitation: Write with Me | p. 5 |
| How Do You Find Something to Write About? | p. 6 |
| Brainstorming | p. 6 |
| Interview Yourself | p. 9 |
| Circle the Subject | p. 10 |
| Try Out Lines | p. 11 |
| Play with Images | ... MORE |
| Make Connections | p. 13 |
| What If | p. 14 |
| Be Specific | p. 15 |
| End-of-Chapter Interviews | p. 18 |
| Interview with a Published Writer-Elizabeth Cooke | p. 18 |
| How to Get the Writing Done: Tricks of the Writer's Trade | p. 24 |
| Nulla Dies Sine Linea | p. 26 |
| Establish Achievable Deadlines | p. 27 |
| Break a Writing Assignment into Small Daily Tasks | p. 28 |
| Know Tomorrow's Task Today | p. 28 |
| Keep a Daybook | p. 29 |
| Rehearse | p. 30 |
| A Writer's Place | p. 30 |
| Reading for Revision | p. 32 |
| Test Readers | p. 33 |
| Where Do We Find Test Readers? | p. 33 |
| What Test Readers Do | p. 34 |
| The Danger of Test Readers | p. 34 |
| Setting the Reader's Agenda | p. 36 |
| Reading Writing in Process | p. 37 |
| Techniques of Responding | p. 38 |
| Methods of Reader Response | p. 40 |
| Rewrite with Focus | p. 44 |
| Elements of Focus | p. 45 |
| Selection | p. 45 |
| Emphasis | p. 46 |
| Clarity | p. 46 |
| Premature Focusing | p. 46 |
| How to Focus | p. 48 |
| The List | p. 48 |
| The Discovery Draft | p. 50 |
| What if I Don't Discover in My Discovery Draft? | p. 54 |
| How Do I Make an Instructor's Idea My Own? | p. 54 |
| Understand the Assignment | p. 55 |
| Interview the Assignment | p. 55 |
| Rewrite by Context | p. 56 |
| Connect | p. 57 |
| How Do I Make the Boss's Idea My Own? | p. 57 |
| Focus Repair | p. 58 |
| Diagnosis: No Focus | p. 58 |
| Testing Your Focus | p. 59 |
| If the Diagnosis Is Positive | p. 61 |
| Say One Thing | p. 62 |
| How Can I Find That One Thing? | p. 62 |
| But What about All the Other Good Stuff? | p. 67 |
| Frame Your Meaning | p. 67 |
| What to Leave Out | p. 68 |
| What to Keep In | p. 69 |
| Set the Distance | p. 69 |
| When to Use Close-ups | p. 70 |
| When to Step Back | p. 70 |
| When to Zoom | p. 70 |
| Interview with a Published Writer-Christopher Scanlan | p. 71 |
| Rewrite with Genre | p. 75 |
| Choosing the Genre | p. 76 |
| Genre Provides Meaning | p. 77 |
| The Five-Paragraph Theme | p. 78 |
| The Unshaped Material | p. 79 |
| Diagnosis: Ineffective Genre | p. 83 |
| Genre Communicates Meaning | p. 84 |
| Discovering the Genre for the Draft | p. 85 |
| The Internal Genre | p. 85 |
| The External Genre | p. 86 |
| The Essential Narrative | p. 89 |
| Narrative's Clock | p. 90 |
| Questions Answered; Questions Asked | p. 91 |
| Walking Beside the Reader | p. 92 |
| Reading the Listener | p. 92 |
| Entertaining the Reader | p. 93 |
| Design Your Own Genre | p. 93 |
| The Discovered Genre | p. 93 |
| The Invented Genre | p. 94 |
| Create an Effective Design | p. 95 |
| What Is Saved | p. 96 |
| What Is Discarded | p. 97 |
| Case History of a Student Writer-Maureen Healy | p. 97 |
| Rewrite with Structure | p. 119 |
| Diagnosis: Disorder | p. 120 |
| Answer the Reader's Questions | p. 123 |
| Outline After Writing | p. 125 |
| Expose the Structure of a Draft | p. 125 |
| Outline After Writing | p. 126 |
| Adapt the Structure | p. 126 |
| Redesign the Structure | p. 126 |
| Interview with a Student Writer-Kathryn S. Evans | p. 127 |
| Rewrite with Documentation | p. 133 |
| Diagnosis: Too Little Information | p. 135 |
| The Writer's Eye | p. 136 |
| The Importance of Information | p. 139 |
| Provides Reader Satisfaction | p. 139 |
| Establishes Authority | p. 140 |
| Produces Lively Writing | p. 140 |
| The Qualities of Effective Information | p. 141 |
| Accuracy | p. 141 |
| Specificity | p. 143 |
| Significance | p. 144 |
| Fairness | p. 146 |
| The Basic Forms of Information | p. 146 |
| Where Do You Find Information? | p. 148 |
| Memory | p. 148 |
| Observation | p. 149 |
| Internet | p. 150 |
| Interview | p. 150 |
| Library | p. 151 |
| Attribution | p. 154 |
| Writing with Information | p. 156 |
| The Craft of Selection | p. 156 |
| Style | p. 157 |
| Interview with a Student Writer-Jennifer Bradley-Swift | p. 160 |
| Rewrite To-Develop | p. 166 |
| Diagnosis: Superficial | p. 167 |
| Techniques of Development | p. 168 |
| Develop with Information | p. 168 |
| Develop with Authority | p. 169 |
| Develop with Clarity | p. 171 |
| Put Meaning in Context | p. 172 |
| Rewriting Starts with Rereading | p. 172 |
| Read Fragments | p. 174 |
| Read What Isn't Written | p. 175 |
| Problem: No Territory | p. 176 |
| Solution | p. 176 |
| Problem: No Surprise | p. 176 |
| Solution | p. 177 |
| Problem: No Writer | p. 177 |
| Solution | p. 177 |
| Problem: No Respect | p. 178 |
| Solution | p. 178 |
| Problem: Too Little | p. 178 |
| Solution | p. 179 |
| Problem: Too Much | p. 179 |
| Solution | p. 180 |
| Problem: Too Private | p. 180 |
| Solution | p. 180 |
| Problem: No Significance | p. 181 |
| Solution | p. 181 |
| Problem: No Connection | p. 181 |
| Solution | p. 182 |
| Rewrite within the Draft | p. 182 |
| Emphasize the Significant | p. 183 |
| Pace and Proportion | p. 185 |
| Length | p. 187 |
| Rewrite by Ear | p. 194 |
| What Is Voice? | p. 195 |
| Hearing Your Own Writing | p. 196 |
| Diagnosis: No Voice | p. 199 |
| Hearing the Writer's Voice | p. 200 |
| Hearing Your Own Voice | p. 205 |
| Your Language or Mine? | p. 206 |
| The Importance of Voice | p. 207 |
| The Expected Voice | p. 208 |
| The Formal Voice | p. 209 |
| The Informal Voice | p. 209 |
| Genre Voices | p. 209 |
| The Voice of the Draft | p. 210 |
| Case History of a Professional Writer-Donald M. Murray | p. 211 |
| Rewrite with Clarity | p. 216 |
| Twenty Ways to Unfinal a Draft | p. 218 |
| The Attitude of the Editing Writer | p. 220 |
| Writing Is Editing | p. 220 |
| Imagine the Reader | p. 220 |
| My Ear Is a Better Editor Than My Eye | p. 221 |
| The Draft Will Tell You What It Needs | p. 221 |
| Welcome Surprise | p. 221 |
| Language Is Alive and Changing | p. 221 |
| Accept Limitations | p. 222 |
| Establish Achievable Standards | p. 222 |
| Interview Your Draft | p. 222 |
| Solutions to Common Editing Problems | p. 226 |
| How Do I Recognize Surprise? | p. 226 |
| How to Read to Edit | p. 227 |
| How to Edit a Boring Draft so It Isn't | p. 229 |
| The Craft of Editing | p. 232 |
| The Tools of Revision | p. 233 |
| A Student Case History-Roger LePage, Jr. | p. 234 |
| The Student's Original Draft | p. 235 |
| A Professional's Editing | p. 239 |
| The Student's Reaction to Professional Editing | p. 245 |
| The Student's Revision | p. 248 |
| The Craft of Letting Go | p. 252 |
| Why Writers Don't Let Go | p. 254 |
| Fear of Exposure | p. 254 |
| Obsession with Correctness | p. 255 |
| Continuing Discovery | p. 255 |
| How to Let Go | p. 256 |
| Deadlines | p. 256 |
| Collaboration | p. 257 |
| Decreased Discovery | p. 257 |
| When You Let Go | p. 257 |
| Readers Make the Draft Theirs | p. 257 |
| Free to Write | p. 259 |
| Index | p. 260 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |