Book Review: THE EMOTIONAL CRAFT OF FICTION by Donald Maass

The Emotional Craft of Fiction: How to Write with Emotional Power, Develop Achingly Real Characters, Move Your Readers, and Create Riveting Moral StakesThe Emotional Craft of Fiction: How to Write with Emotional Power, Develop Achingly Real Characters, Move Your Readers, and Create Riveting Moral Stakes by Donald Maass

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

If you’re wanting to improve your skills as a writer, read books written by Donald Maass.

Having devoured two other books written by Donald Maass, I was thrilled to finally read THE EMOTIONAL CRAFT OF FICTION.

One of the elements I love best about his books is when he includes exercises to put principles into practice. In THE EMOTIONAL CRAFT OF FICTION, these “exercises” are each titled “Emotional Mastery.” There are 34 different ones throughout the book, and there is even a checklist in the back of the book to mark your progress completing the exercises.

Within “Emotional Mastery 8: The Meaning of Everything” Maass writes: “Choose some dry information that must be imparted for your story to make sense. Who has this knowledge? How does that character see these facts as no one else does? … What is good, bad, worrisome, reassuring, or in some other way revealing about these facts? What does your character love or hate about what these facts are saying? What would she change about this information if possible? What would he change about himself? … Don’t be afraid of slowing the pace. When you deepen the meaning of things, no one will complain” (page 67).

An additional highlight of this book is the chapter at the end: “The Writer’s Emotional Journey.” While I loved the entire book, this chapter had me nodding my head and saying, “Yes.”

Maass writes: “Many fiction writers do not feel worthy of their calling. … When writers approach their craft that way, it shows. You can sense when fiction is masking cynicism or anger. … The spirit that you bring to your writing desk either infects your pages or enlivens them. … How you feel inside is how we will feel in reading. … In some ways the most important work you do in writing your novel is the work you do on yourself. … your fundamental outlook, your positive spirit, your embrace of goodness, your faith in humanity. It shows in … granting strength to your characters and filling their hearts with expectation” (pages 177-178).

I could continue to quote passages and sing the praises of this book, or I could simply say: Go read this book if you want to improve your skills as a writer. Oh, wait, that’s how I started this review! Go. Now. Read. Practice. Improve. And …

Enjoy the gift of being called a writer.

View all my reviews

Published by Margo Kelly

Margo Kelly is a veteran public speaker and the author of WHO R U REALLY? - a thriller for the young adult audience. You can read more about Margo and her books on her website: www.margokelly.net

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