By
Kelly Bridgewater
As
writers, we are always looking for advice to make our writing jump off the page
and into the reader’s imagination. The writing book I’m want to talk about this
month is not a writing instruction or advice book where you will find
information about plot twists, characters, or how to revise your book. I came
across this in grad school when I wanted to figure out how to pump up my
writing and make it more sophisticated. Grammar
for College Writing by Don and Jenny Killgallon is a great resource for
anyone who wants to improve their sentence writing ability.
From Amzon |
How
could a book that quotes J. K. Rowling, author of the famous Harry Potter
series, who is a master at creating details with her sentences be bad? I knew that
I loved the Harry Potter series, but I never actually focused on how she
constructed her sentences. After doing the first section in Killgallon’s book,
Noun Group: The Naming Tools, I was hooked.
They
take simple grammatical words like appositives, gerunds, infinitive, and noun
clauses and shows how to expand the sentences using these grammatical devices.
She starts each section defining what each term means with at least three
different examples from classic literature. Then the review section is usually
pretty big. First, you will exchange sentences by switching up the infinitive
or gerund with something closely grammatically related. Then you will practice
expanding by adding an infinitive phrase or gerund phrase to the bold face
section. There is matching. Multiple choices. More practice.
It
really helped me to improve my sentences. While I was teaching college at
Indiana State University in their English department, I would throw in some
grammar on Fridays. Some of the exercises were from this book. I would start
the exercise with taking apart one of Rowling’s well-written sentences and make
it flow as a simple sentence: He ran. Sweat poured. Foot hurt. After putting
the sentence back together, they learned how much better a variety of sentences
in our writing can flow better. As much as I enjoyed improving my sentences, I
believed my students didn’t like it, but I showed them how richer than writer
can be by using these simple tricks.
This
is a great book if you want to learn how to make your sentences have more
variety. I also suggest looking at J. K. Rowlings famous series and observe how
her sentences just flow off the page.
Do
you enjoy learning how to grammatically better your sentences better? As a
writer, grammar should be important to our lives as much as the creating of our
stories.
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