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TITLE: Writer's Digest Magazine
["America's Leading Writer's Magazine" -- See FULL contents below!]
ISSUE DATE: FEBRUARY 1986; Vol. 66, No. 2
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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COVER: RAY BRADBURY. The Author of Fahrenheit 451, The Illustrated Man and Death Is A Lonely Business talks about tapping the ultimate source of warm, human, touching fiction.

FEATURES:
Ray Bradbury's Nostalgia for the Future by Timothy Perrin "All the good, weird stories I've written are based on things I've dredged out of my subconscious," says Bradbury. "That's the real stuff. Everything else is fake." The author of Dandelion Wine and Fahrenheit confides how to write the real stuff, the magical stuff.

The Basics of Successful Fiction Part Ill: Choosing Your Storyteller by Joel Rosenberg "Who's going to tell your story? You're going to write it, but who's going to tell it? Through whose eyes will readers see it?" Your choice of' point of view is among the most important you will make.

Writing Poetry for Children by Barbara Steiner Writing verse for children has special requirements: spontaneity and a sense of wonder. And a spirit of fun.

DEPARTMENTS:
Letters New York Market Letter by Hayes B. Jacobs The Writing Life A good and manly tale of imitation.
The Markets by Paula Deimling.
Write It My Way by Willard R. Espy.
Tip Sheet.
The West Market Report by John M. Wilson.
Grammar Grappler.
COLUMNS:
Telling the Tiny Tale by Connie Emerson The author of How to Make Money Writing Fillers explains how to bring your nonfiction to life by using anecdotes--brief illustrative stories.
Ten Ways to Get to Know Your Market Better Than Its Editor Does by John Wood An editor with Modern Maturity reveals a market-study technique that will help you understand the magazines you want to write for as well as--if not better than--their editors do.
Chronicle: Free Writer by Randy Thomas The oceans are as vast, as challenging, as free as the opportunities that await the adventurous writer .. . COMING UP In March, bestselling writer Irving Wallace offers advice and inspiration in Counsel From a Veteran of the Writing Wars. And author/workshop leader Marshall Cook explains how to train your muse in Seven Steps to Harnessing Your Creativity.
Language: Balancing Act by Robert M. Pierson Techniques to make you look graceful on writing's high wire.
Poetry: Imagine That by Judson Jerome Lessons in the poem's motive force: imagery.
Nonfiction: Column Right by Art Spikol Sometimes wrong is right when writing a column.
Scripts: Great Expectations by J. Michael Straczynski Some harsh lessons in Hollywood deal-making.
Fiction: Length Wise by Lawrence Block How long--or how short-- must your fiction be?


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