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Write for Your Life

A Guide to Clear and Purposeful Writing (and Presentations)

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The bestselling author's practical guide to writing clearly and convincingly in every professional setting.
Charles Wheelan has spent decades mastering effective communication skills in his work as a writer, college professor, journalist, speechwriter, political candidate, and public speaker. In Write for Your Life, he shares his best tips. He covers how to organize and present information, why it's necessary to adapt one's tone to different audiences, and when to use summaries, sidebars, bullet points, and other tools for making information more digestible. He explores the truth behind popular clichés like "Show don't tell" and "Kill your darlings," and discusses the proper use and attribution of quotations from secondary sources.
Throughout, the book is leavened with memorable anecdotes from leading magazine and newspaper writers and public figures such as Winston Churchill and Elena Kagan, as well as a diverse array of the best communicators from the worlds of culture, sports, and politics. Write for Your Life is an essential guide for anyone needing to get their ideas across whether in a memo, report, presentation, fundraising letter, or speech.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 4, 2022
      “Whatever you do, good writing will help,” advises journalist Wheelan (Naked Economics) in this muddled guide. Learning to write, Wheelan posits, is fundamental to all areas of life, and clear communication can smooth out everyday exchanges. In chapters that cover “Getting Started,” “Making It Better,” and “Buffing and Polishing,” Wheelan offers writing rules that, for the most part, rely on the familiar: cut superfluous language, create an outline, and use descriptive language, or, as he puts it, “show, don’t tell.” He goes beyond the page in a middling chapter on speech delivery: “practice,” he suggests, and “decide if you want to take questions, and if so, how you’ll take them.” Along the way, Wheelan references Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail” as a showcase for the power of communication, and the movie The Hangover as an example of deciding on a “narrative structure.” Throughout, asides on topics such as sports, Chicago politics, and criticisms of his past students appear, though they tend to mostly clutter things up. With so many writing guides out there, this one doesn’t do enough to separate itself from the pack.

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  • English

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