Dr. Worstell is known for the depth and volume of his research - as well as his published works.
With seven degrees to his credit, ranging from comparative religions to computer networking, there are few fields he hasn't researched as a means to finding workable truths anyone can apply.
His current work is in making fiction writing profitable, and kicking over the bee-hives of established "guru's" in that field. Worstell feels that creating a living by writing should be simple and inexpensive.
Most of his work is available through his blog posts long before they become books. This blog-to-book method is a way of sharing and refining his material broadly to everyone.
Dorothea Brande (1893–1948) was an American writer and editor in New York City. She was born in Chicago and attended the University of Chicago, the Lewis Institute in Chicago and the University of Michigan.
Her book "Becoming a Writer", published in 1934, is still in print and offers advice for beginning and sustaining any writing enterprise. She also wrote "Wake Up and Live!", published in 1936, which sold more than two million copies. It was made into the film Wake Up and Live in 1937.
While she was serving as associate editor of The American Review in 1936, she married the journal's owner and editor, Seward Collins. Dorothea Brande Collins died in New Hampshire.
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Becoming A Writer
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There is one way to succeed as a writer – and that starts before you put down a single word.
Imagine what you could accomplish if you knew for a fact that you would succeed at anything you set out to do?
All your books could be perfect – perennial bestsellers from day one.
Of course, that thought that just ran through your head is exactly why they aren't.
Yes, really.
In this book is the single formula that Dorothea Brande discovered for herself. Applying it changed her life from one where she considered herself to be a personal failure into one of being a noted success.
That's what you can become.
The very best writer you can. Because there's no way you can fail at this.
These two books take all of Brande's discoveries and aligns them into a cohesive system that can take you into realms you might only be able to imagine.
Each by themselves have created remarkable success for their readers. Together, it takes even the beginning writer to unimaginable heights.
If you believe and apply what she said here.
You only have to "Act As If it Was Impossible to Fail."
Excerpt:
For most of my adult life I have been engaged in the writing, the editing, or the criticizing of fiction.
I took, and I still take, the writing of fiction seriously.
The importance of novels and short stories in our society is great. Fiction supplies the only philosophy that many readers know; it establishes their ethical, social, and material standards; it confirms them in their prejudices or opens their minds to a wider world.
The influence of any widely read book can hardly be overestimated. If it is sensational, shoddy, or vulgar our lives are the poorer for the cheap ideals which it sets in circulation; if, as so rarely happens, it is a thoroughly good book, honestly conceived and honestly executed, we are all indebted to it.
The movies have not undermined the influence of fiction. On the contrary, they have extended its field, carrying the ideas which are already current among readers to those too young, too impatient, or too uneducated to read.
So I make no apology for writing seriously about the problems of fiction writers. But until two years ago I should have felt apologetic about adding another volume to the writer's working library.
But two years ago I began, myself, to teach a class in fiction writing.
Nothing was further from my mind, on the evening of my first lecture, than adding to the top-heavy literature on the subject. Although I had been considerably disappointed in most of the books I had read and all the classes I had attended, it was not until I joined the ranks of instructors that I realized the true basis of my discontent.
That basis of discontent was that the difficulties of the average student or amateur writer begin long before he has come to the place where he can benefit by technical instruction in story writing.
In the opening lecture, within the first few pages of his book, within a sentence or two of his authors' symposium, he will encounter the disclaimer that "genius cannot be taught", which most teachers and authors seem to feel must be stated as early and as abruptly as possible, and is the death knell of his real hope.
He had longed to hear that there was some magic about writing, and to be initiated into the brotherhood of authors.
This book, I believe, will be unique; for I think he is right. I think there is such a magic, and that it is teachable. This book is all about the writer's magic.
Get Your Copy Now.
Título : Dorothea Brande's Becoming A Writer Collection
EAN : 9798201369095
Editorial : Living Sensical Press
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