By Bette Lee Crosby
Whether you realize it
or not, you’ve probably got at least one pesky word—a word that slides into
places where it doesn’t belong and slows the sentence. A pesky word can pop up
anywhere; most of the time it’s unnecessary, unwarranted and lumpy. Okay, you’re
working on a 50,000-word story, but I seriously doubt you want 5,000 of them to
be dragging their heels rather than moving the action forward.
My pesky word is “that.”
Instead of saying, “It was a letter I intended to mail,” the word that squirms
itself in and the sentence becomes, “It was a letter that I
intended to mail.” My pesky word all too often shows up in dialogue and makes
the characters sound stinted and dull. In common everyday speech, people do not
include those extra words. They say what they have to say without adding
flowers and bows. If you get rid of your pesky words, your characters will
shine through as the stars they were intended to be.
I write in a Southern
voice and when pesky words creep into my character’s dialogue, they lose the
sound of the South. Southerners are by nature gentle souls, they don’t
use over-structured language. When I strip away the unnecessary words, those
characters become as natural as your Aunt Sally or Uncle Oscar.
“That” isn’t the only
pesky word around, there are lots of them—and, but, the, when, because,
almost—the list is endless. So how do you find these critters? How do you flush
them out into the open and get rid of them? The best place to start is by
reading your work aloud. If you stumble over a word, the probability is it
shouldn’t be there. If dialogue doesn’t sound natural to your ear, it won’t
sound natural to the reader either.
Try it, and if you
suspect you’ve got a pesky word, search it. If the result page is filled with
highlighted boxes, you’ll know for sure you’ve found the bugger and you can
start being a bit more wary about using it.
Good luck and have fun.
But if you happen upon a big bunch of that’s don’t send them
my way—I’ve already got more than I can use.
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Award-winning
novelist Bette Lee Crosby brings the wit and wisdom of her Southern Mama to
works of fiction--the result is a delightful blend of humor, mystery and
romance along with a cast of quirky charters who will steal your heart away. She
received The National League of American Pen Women Award for a then unpublished
manuscript in 2006. She has won another NLAPW award, three Royal Palm Literary
Awards, and the FPA President's Book Award Gold Medal.Her published novels to
date are: Cracks in the Sidewalk (2009), Spare Change (2011), The Twelfth Child(2012), Cupid's Christmas (2012) and What Matters Most (2013). She has also
authored "Life in the Land of IS" a memoir of Lani Deauville, a woman
the Guinness Book of Records lists as the world's longest living quadriplegic. Crosby
originally studied art and began her career as a packaging designer. When asked
to write a few lines of copy for the back of a pantyhose package, she
discovered a love for words that was irrepressible. After years of writing for
business, she turned to works of fiction and never looked back.
"Storytelling is in my blood," Crosby laughingly admits, "My mom
was not a writer, but she was a captivating storyteller, so I find myself using
bits and pieces of her voice in most everything I write."The Twelfth Child" won First Place
in the Royal Palm Literary Award Competition for Women's Fiction! "Cupid's Christmas" won Third Place Award.
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