Showing posts with label development. Show all posts
Showing posts with label development. Show all posts
Friday, September 07, 2018
something almost true
I was a member of a show-business family. We were in a movie that was nominated for the Best Picture Academy Award. I got blackout drunk at the awards ceremony. Early the next morning, I asked someone what happened. He answered, "You won!" I was disbelieving. He added, "Yeah, and you spoke! You gave a speech!" More disbelief; plus anxiety. He showed me a transcript of what I said, and, of course, it was incoherent. I felt ashamed; this would be my legacy.
Note: The ceremony included a great live performance of scenes from the movie version of Pink Floyd's The Wall.
Labels:
album,
creative writing,
development,
dream,
ideas,
movie,
note,
novel,
pink floyd,
plot,
short story,
The Wall
Saturday, June 23, 2018
something about "Editors on Editing"

The third edition of Editors on Editing is a collection of somewhat specialized and particular essays about the job of editing. The editor, Gerald Gross, solicited mostly new essays for this edition--this is what is meant by "Completely Revisited" in the subtitle. The only essay I found relevant was "Line Editing, The Art of the Reasonable Suggestion."
Labels:
art,
career,
craft,
development,
discipline,
Editors on Editing,
employment,
essays,
expression,
Gerald Gross,
job,
nonfiction,
profession,
prose,
review,
writing
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