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This writing course prepares |
| The 450-page course manual for Breaking into Print
contains 12 send-in assignments grouped in three major blocks of
instruction in the techniques of writing fiction and nonfiction.
More than 75 skill-building exercises and over 50 tips on writing
techniques are included.
You’ll also receive 10 textbooks, 15 instructional supplements, nearly 200 sources for further study, and an exclusive guide to the more than 1,700 publications most likely to buy your writing. With these carefully selected tools and the expert guidance of your personal instructor, you’ll achieve—and perhaps exceed—the goals of this program:
By the time you finish our program, you will complete at least two
manuscripts suitable to submit to editors. You’ll also write a
character sketch, plans for six stories and articles, and eight
complete manuscripts. |
| Part 1: Writing
to catch a reader’s
interest You sharpen your powers of descriptive writing, draw on your personal experience for story and article material, and learn the discipline of writing to a word count. Your instructor will show you how to establish professional work habits to make the most of your time. |
| You learn how to plan and construct stories and articles, how to
catch the reader’s interest, how to build to a climax, and how to
write a satisfying ending.
You are taught how to look for detail with a writer’s eye and how to use these details in forceful, effective fiction and nonfiction. The ability to perceive and examine your surroundings for article and story material is taught in the program manual and through analyzing published stories to compare the techniques used by professional authors. |
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| This section demonstrates that there are innumerable imaginative ways of finding ideas and infinite varieties of methods for developing rough concepts into polished writing. |
| Techniques taught in Part 1 |
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| Fiction techniques |
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| Nonfiction techniques |
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You begin your training by mastering the basics of good writing. Then, with steady guidance from your personal instructor, you’ll explore various forms of fiction and nonfiction writing to help you to find the niche that fits your personal and professional goals and aspirations. |
| Part 2: Finding your
own genre Your writing takes on a new dimension in this section of the program. You move from a generalized plan to writing a manuscript targeted to a specific readership. Your growing skills in using effective techniques and your increasing knowledge of markets help to point the way to your individual writing strengths. |
| You learn the techniques of identifying the market for which you
want to write by using a directory published by Long Ridge Writers
Group titled The Best of the Magazine Markets for Writers. You learn how to tailor your manuscript to fit the editorial requirements of specific publications, when and how to write a query letter, and where to send it. |
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| You explore the
vast and varied nonfiction market—its unique
features relative to the market for fiction writing—and learn to
apply the techniques and skills you have developed to prepare
saleable articles. You discover why nonfiction is a very responsive and growing market, particularly for new authors. |
| Techniques taught in Part 2 Fiction techniques |
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| Nonfiction techniques |
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| At the end of Part 2 you will have reached a milestone: the completion of two articles or stories, edited and targeted to the market. |
| Part 3: Writing for editors and publishers |
| The objective of the program and the challenge to you and your
instructor is to develop your skills, resources,
and work habits to a level that will prepare you to keep on writing—independently—long after you complete your training.
Focusing on the special strengths and interests you developed in the program, you complete three additional manuscripts and devise a strategy for marketing them. |
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| Techniques taught in Part 3 |
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| Fiction techniques |
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| Nonfiction techniques |
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After you find your genre, you’ll study the markets and publications in it that welcome freelance manuscripts. By the time you finish the program, you’ll complete at least two manuscripts—fiction, nonfiction, or one of each—that are ready to submit for publication. |
| It is of great importance that you adjust your study hours to your schedule and work at a rate you find comfortable. Your work pace and rate of progress are up to you. Remember, the essentials of this program are flexibility and individual instruction designed to meet your personal and professional goals and aspirations. |
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2003, 2004, 2005, 2006
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