How to Write Good
by Frank L. Visco
My several years in the
word game have learnt me several rules:
1. Avoid alliteration.
Always.
2. Prepositions are not
words to end sentences with.
3. Avoid cliches like the
plague. (They're old hat.)
4. Employ the vernacular.
5. Eschew ampersands &
abbreviations, etc.
6. Parenthetical remarks
(however relevant) are unnecessary.
7. It is wrong to ever
split an infinitive.
8. Contractions aren't
necessary.
9. Foreign words and
phrases are not apropos.
10. One should never
generalize.
11. Eliminate quotations.
As Ralph Waldo Emerson once said: "I hate quotations. Tell me what you
know."
12. Comparisons are as bad
as cliches.
13. Don't be redundant;
don't more use words than necessary; it's highly superfluous.
14. Profanity sucks.
15. Be more or less
specific.
16. Understatement is
always best.
17. Exaggeration is a
billion times worse than understatement.
18. One-word sentences?
Eliminate.
19. Analogies in writing
are like feathers on a snake.
20. The passive voice is to
be avoided.
21. Go around the barn at
high noon to avoid colloquialisms.
22. Even if a mixed
metaphor sings, it should be derailed.
23. Who needs rhetorical
questions?
Added February 4, 1996
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