The Writer

FINDING THE EMOTIONAL CENTER OF YOUR ESSAY

You’re wandering through a foggy day in a familiar city, drifting the way we do when we’re not worrying about time, place, or consequences. That’s how I feel when I write the first draft of an essay, and if that’s where you are now, good. You’re right where you need to be.

A personal essay can range all the way from formal to creative nonfiction, and it usually involves a character arc (yours). What doesn’t change is the importance of an emotional center. In a formal essay, it’s clear because you have a thesis statement. When you move into less-structured forms, you’re really almost dreaming the first draft, moving back and forth through time, maybe adding dialogue. Then, sooner or later, you have to step out of that dream. Revising means more than just fixing the commas and rearranging a few sentences. It means finding the emotional

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

More from The Writer

The Writer6 min read
An Interview With Xueyan
Question: In your essay, you share the story of your friend saying, “Xueyan, I need to tell you something that you must understand: your buck teeth don’t make your smile sorry. On the contrary, they make your smile sunny. I think your smile is really
The Writer3 min readIntelligence (AI) & Semantics
The Joy of Work
I IMAGINE BOTH YOU AND I ARE CURIous to see how artificial intelligence is going to “disrupt” (to use the Silicon Valley vernacular) the writing world in the next few years. This question sizzled for me during a community development meeting in my to
The Writer3 min read
Art Of The Interview
INTERVIEWING IS A HIGH ART. Whether a series of questions conducted for a primetime television show, the probing of characters by a fiction writer or the one-chance question shouted at a public figure, the results can make or break the final product.

Related Books & Audiobooks