Nib #96 Young Hemingway’s Style Guide
One of the challenges young writers today face when trying to improve their craft is they don’t know quite what to aim for. They may know good writing when they read it. But schools nowadays rarely teach students what makes a piece of writing good. So most young writers are left to figure it out on their own.
But they don’t have to!
About a century ago, the Kansas City Star newspaper tried to solve this problem by laying out 110 rules to guide its reporters’ writing. One of those reporters was young Ernest Hemingway, who ever after credited his spare, clean style with his old boss’s rules.
“Use short sentences. Use short first paragraphs. Use vigorous English. Be positive, not negative.”
What’s not to love?!
If you’ve ever just wanted all the rules of good writing on one sheet of paper you can pin up on a bulletin board above your desk,
here you go:

Until next week… keep writing!











