Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
Writer's Digest

Pro Tips

THE HANK TUCK

ank Phillippi Ryan, author of , explains, “My editor calls my approach ‘the Hank tucking method.’ To begin to set the backstory, I tuck in a phrase, or a memory, or a reference in the midst of something else. Phrases: “If I meet someone for the first time, it’s overwhelming if they tell me their life story in the first conversation.”

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Writer's Digest

Writer's Digest12 min read
Steven Rowley
Steven Rowley’s novels are intimately epic—stories about people who are thrown into the deep end of life’s defining moments. Where there is love, there is loss, and with it, the unifying power of grief. In a word, Rowley writes about change, and whil
Writer's Digest3 min read
Mario Alejandro Ariza
What does it mean to lead a literary life amidst ongoing ecocide? Sometimes, you start writing a book without realizing it. My book started off as a lyric essay, a long prose poem of doubtful quality and uncertain subject that I put together for a gr
Writer's Digest1 min read
Worth a Thousand Words
Bob Eckstein is a New York Times bestselling author and a cartoonist. His new book is Footnotes From the Most Fascinating Museums: Stories and Memorable Moments From People Who Love Museums. ■

Related