What’s the Matter With Grammar? – Part I

Be A NovelistIn this era of tweets, texts, and Facebook posts where words are shortened, punctuation omitted, apostrophes ignored, and sentence structure pretty much butchered and hung out to dry, one may ask – in all good conscience – does grammar still matter for the serious novelist?

I’m sure you will get different answers from different novelists, from different writing instructors, from different editors, and even from different readers.

Some will say that everything is changing so drastically that good use of the English language is no longer at the top of the list of skills that a novelist must hone.  They go so far as to say that people are becoming so accustomed to the bad use of grammar, that good grammar isn’t as useful as it once was.

I will dare to weigh in on this subject, knowing that my opinion is just that – one opinion in the midst of thousands.  But that’s what a blog is for, right?

The Tools of Professionals

Any professional of any business, or art form, has their “tools of the trade.”

  • A ballerina knows the tiniest and most intricate move that must be made for every dance she performs.  And her toe shoes must be fitted and tied just so.
  • A trained surgeon knows every surgical tool and knows precisely how each is to be used.
  • A chemist is intimately familiar with various chemicals and how each is to be integrated and used.
  • A mountain climber’s very life is dependent on each piece of equipment.  The professional climber not only knows the equipment, but how each piece is to be used, and how it is to be packed correctly.

My ToolsBe A Novelist

The tools of my trade are words and the written language.  My desire to use my tools correctly is not dependent upon how many people leave apostrophes out of their Tweets.  My desire to use my tools correctly is totally dependent upon my passion for my calling.

My passion for writing compelling novels drives me to excel in every area of my craft, and that includes grammar.   That passion compels me to strive for excellence.  That passion spurs me on to continually self-educate in the areas of spelling and grammar.

To take one part out of the entire panorama of the novel-writing process – i.e. grammar – and attempt to decide whether or not it is of importance, is like taking one tool from the mountain climber’s pack and trying to decide whether or not it is of importance.  Or selecting one of the surgeon’s tools and doing the same.

It’s a rather ridiculous way to look at the entire scheme of novel writing.

You Decide

So – is grammar important?question mark

  • Only if you have a deep, heartfelt passion to become an excellent novelist.
  • Only if you want your writing to be clear and easily understood.
  • Only if you want your scenes and characters to spring to life on the pages.
  • Only if you truly respect your readers and want to present to them your very best.
  • Only if you want to build a following of adoring fans who cannot wait for your next book to come out.

If you can honestly say that none of the above fit you – you don’t want any of them – then I have to question if you want to be a novelist at all

Only you know your own heart.  Only you can decide!

(Don’t miss Part II of What’s the Matter With Grammar?)

Clean Teen ReadsBe A NovelistTired of the struggle writing your book? Need a helping hand? Norma Jean’s Coaching Services may be the answer you’re looking for. Fill out the questionnaire on the page and let’s see if we’re a right fit. A FREE consultation gets the ball rolling. (Or the pen writing!) Click HERE!

Clean Teen Reads

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How Novelists View Their World

A Chair or a Stack of Old Books?

Old BooksMy adult daughter and I were strolling through a combination antique shop and flea market.  In the corner of a cozy little nook sat an antique child’s rocking chair.  It may have been handmade; it was beautiful.  In the seat of the little chair was a large stack of ancient, yellow-paged, tattered books. At that moment an interesting phenomenon took place.  Daughter, Rhonda, saw the chair; author-mother, Norma Jean, saw the books.  Rhonda was unaware of the books; I was totally unaware of what they were stacked upon.  We laughed about it at the time, but it spoke volumes!

How do you view your world?  How do you as a novelist see your world?  If you have never paid attention – start now.

Here’s another example:

A Word PersonBe A Novelist

One day I showed my artist friend a photo of me and my two children standing on our front porch.  Want to know what she saw?  It was in early March and the trees were bare with spindly limbs. She saw the reflection of the pattern of those bare limbs in my glass storm door.  I was amazed as she ran her finger along that pattern admiring it.  Would I have ever noticed that intricate pattern?  Probably not.  But I’m not an artist – I’m a word person.  I’m a novelist.

I’m fascinated with puns, word games, variant spellings, regional dialects, idioms, colloquialisms, dictionaries and the wonderful, exciting thesaurus!  (And very OLD books!) In the same way that my friend was fascinated by the way the trees cast their pattern on the glass door, I am fascinated with everything that has to do with words.  No one will ever be a quality writer unless they love the language they use.

With all the technological gadgetry available these days, it’s not as easy to get lost in the fun use of words, or even the exact use of words.  Or the lovely deep appreciation of how words sound (when you are reading truly great prose) as they fall on the inner ear.  Hopefully you are one of the few who has bridged the gap successfully.

Be A NovelistYou Become the Receptor

As the novelist you serve as the receptor of the world you live in.  You then, in turn, process your perceptions into a compelling story line that draws in and holds reader attention so as to keep the reader spellbound until the very last page.

So how do you look at things?  What do you see?  How perceptive and active is your mind’s eye?  And how well can you transpose those perceptions onto paper with your written words?  Why not practice and see!

Clean Teen ReadsBe A NovelistTired of the struggle writing your book? Need a helping hand? Norma Jean’s Coaching Services may be the answer you’re looking for. Fill out the questionnaire on the page and let’s see if we’re a right fit. A FREE consultation gets the ball rolling. (Or the pen writing!) Click HERE!

Clean Teen Reads

Be A Novelist

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