7 reasons to write an essay
Jan 6, 2024 2:03:59 GMT -5
Post by account_disabled on Jan 6, 2024 2:03:59 GMT -5
In addition to fiction and articles, I also like reading and writing non-fiction . So far I have written 4 essays on blogging, but only the last one, which I sent to a publisher last week, satisfied me. Writing an essay, in my opinion, offers many possibilities to a writer, but also to a professional, as long as he has a certain skill in writing. What advantages does writing nonfiction give us? Not a few, as I see it. I found seven. 1 – Bring together your knowledge in a single corpus There is an opinion that goes around in many foreign blogs and it goes something like this: you have a blog, you have written hundreds of posts, put some together and create an ebook to sell. Well, for me this is the worst way to do self-publishing.
Several years ago I bought a PDF "ebook" on a blog, paying about 30 dollars for it and finding nothing more than what had already been published on that blog. “Wrap it up” the Americans say, Special Data something like “put it all together”. But I also happened to buy two books published by two bloggers and discover that they were nothing more than a reshuffle of their posts. Controversy aside, writing an essay in some cases is truly a sort of collection of our skills in a sector, but it must obviously offer the reader a unique work and not a vulgar recycling of things already written. 2 – Learn more about a topic Writing an essay also allows us to improve our knowledge on a specific topic. I realized this when I wrote the book on blogging, in which I explored some topics in depth during the documentation.
If we really want to create an ebook starting from a series of written posts, then - in addition to offering a unique and valuable and not recycled work - we must extend those posts, reevaluate them, rewrite them in the light of the new experiences acquired, of the new opinions also, because a essay, unless it is historical, has a certain philosophical flavor, in my opinion. 3 – Change language Writing a book is not like writing a post. The writer must adapt his language both to the audience and to the medium he will use to disseminate his writing. It is clear that you will always notice something about the author's style, I think it is inevitable, but the approach to the subject must be different. The first book on blogging I wrote, years ago, I didn't like the language. Every time I reread it I felt something wasn't right in those words, in the writing itself, but I didn't understand what it was. After some time I think I discovered what problems that writing had, that style: it was detached, cold, it wasn't engaging at all, each paragraph was pure information put there.
Several years ago I bought a PDF "ebook" on a blog, paying about 30 dollars for it and finding nothing more than what had already been published on that blog. “Wrap it up” the Americans say, Special Data something like “put it all together”. But I also happened to buy two books published by two bloggers and discover that they were nothing more than a reshuffle of their posts. Controversy aside, writing an essay in some cases is truly a sort of collection of our skills in a sector, but it must obviously offer the reader a unique work and not a vulgar recycling of things already written. 2 – Learn more about a topic Writing an essay also allows us to improve our knowledge on a specific topic. I realized this when I wrote the book on blogging, in which I explored some topics in depth during the documentation.
If we really want to create an ebook starting from a series of written posts, then - in addition to offering a unique and valuable and not recycled work - we must extend those posts, reevaluate them, rewrite them in the light of the new experiences acquired, of the new opinions also, because a essay, unless it is historical, has a certain philosophical flavor, in my opinion. 3 – Change language Writing a book is not like writing a post. The writer must adapt his language both to the audience and to the medium he will use to disseminate his writing. It is clear that you will always notice something about the author's style, I think it is inevitable, but the approach to the subject must be different. The first book on blogging I wrote, years ago, I didn't like the language. Every time I reread it I felt something wasn't right in those words, in the writing itself, but I didn't understand what it was. After some time I think I discovered what problems that writing had, that style: it was detached, cold, it wasn't engaging at all, each paragraph was pure information put there.