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The Toolbox contains useful articles and links for writers.

If you have an article for use on this page, please let us know. We'll consider any sound advice to make sure that Book Shed writers remain the ones to watch.

Current Articles

 

Formatting a Manuscript - a few basics

"... Most editors, agents and publishers ask for submissions in an easy to read font. They are not impressed by fancy fonts or strange colours. Using them may make your submission stand out, but not in the way you hope..."

E-mail is your friend

"... above all else, you should be looking for an e-mail address for contact. This can be the biggest key to making sure your work ends up on the desks of the people who might give you a fair crack of the whip ..."

Dialogue Punctuation

"... Punctuation for dialogue is something that beginner writers often get wrong..."

What I Know About Dialogue

"... Readers like dialogue - the majority of them demand it - and it is the first thing they will criticize if it doesn't suit them... "

What I Know About Plotting

"... what is the difference between plot and story? Is there a difference? ... "

Dot, Dot, Dash

"... Three common areas for mistake are the use of commas, semi-colons and colons. So this document or provided as a refresher... "

My Ellipses are Sealed

"... writers often use more than three dots, but the correct punctuation is only three, no more and no less ..."



Shed








My Ellipses are Sealed

The ABC Checklist for  New Writers

This article is taken from The ABC Checklist for New Writers, co-written by Book Shed author Lorraine Mace. The guidebook is written with all budding writers in mind, to help them present works that end up in the shortlist, not the shredder. Information is presented in a concise A - Z format, and unfamiliar terms are explained, taking the novice through each step in the submission process.

Available to buy through Amazon.

 

An ellipsis (…) shows that words or figures are missing from a piece of writing. Beginner writers often use more than three dots, but the correct punctuation is only three, no more and no less.

An ellipsis is often used with quotations. It usually appears in the middle or at the end of a quotation.

For example:
There were hundreds of writers, covering every genre and style of writing, at the symposium.

There were hundreds of writers … at the symposium.

It may be used at the beginning of a quote, but only if the quotation begins mid-sentence and what follows the ellipsis makes sense without the missing words.

The ellipsis can also be used to show a pause in a sentence and/or dialogue:
Sarah cried and cried … and then cried some more. 'I wish I knew why …' she said.

When used mid-sentence, a space should be left between the first and last ellipsis marks and the surrounding words, but if a quotation tapers off (as in Sarah’s dialogue above) you should leave a space between the last letter and the first ellipsis mark, but not between the last dot and the closing quotation mark.

If words are left off the end of a sentence, indicate the omission with ellipsis marks and then indicate the end of the sentence with a full stop …. But if one or more sentences are omitted, end the sentence before the ellipsis with a full stop followed by the ellipsis marks with a space either side. …

When a quotation begins with a complete sentenc e and ends with a complete sentence, it is not necessary to use an ellipsis unless it is important to emphasize that something has been omitted.

The plural of ellipsis is ellipses, but the dots themselves are called ellipsis marks or points.

 


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