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Thread: An Imaginary Chat with Max
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12-08-2011, 03:35 PM #11
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The Following User Says Thank You to coachschaller For This Useful Post:
Obie (12-08-2011)
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12-08-2011, 03:47 PM #12
Hello Wintchase,
Thanks for the kind remarks. I enjoyed writing that. Max, my grandson, is a remarkable little boy, who loves giving hugs. Ours is a hugging family. Also, at this age, he uses complete sentences and enunciates quite well. I am grateful for that, of course.
I used the title, An Imaginary Chat with Max, intentionally, because I knew it would draw attention to the piece. In my world, strong and catchy titles are important.
Thanks for your thoughts, my dear friend.
Stay well.
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12-08-2011, 11:44 PM #13
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The Following User Says Thank You to Wintchase For This Useful Post:
Obie (12-09-2011)
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12-09-2011, 12:56 AM #14
Windchase, that is an excellent point. Still the writing has to be strong to stand on its own. If you notice, I rarely use adverbs, and keep my adjectives to a limit. Adverbs contribute to lame prose. Adjectives do that to a lesser degree, but still do it. Always write with strong verbs. It's the verbs that give weight to the story's style, to the strength of the sentence. I thought of of titling the piece "An Imaginary Chat with My Grandson." That is fine. Yet it does not have the strength of "An Imaginary Chat with Max." I didn't use that title to make the reader think this was a chat with our own Max, the straight razor master. My grandson is Max, named after the great writer Maxwell Anderson. "An Imaginary Chat with Max" hits the spot.
Thanks for your suggestion, my dear friend.
Stay well.
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12-25-2011, 10:52 PM #15
Thanks for sharing Obie.
Bob
"God is a Havana smoker. I have seen his gray clouds" Gainsburg
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The Following User Says Thank You to lz6 For This Useful Post:
Obie (12-25-2011)