(I’m going to try writing short here.)
My editor says my Achilles’ heel is wordiness. High school English teachers grilled me on writing more complexly—compound sentencing, etc. Thus, my instincts—even after journalism instruction in college—are still to write “City Council members are considering the possibility of...” instead of “City Council members debate...”
My worry is that readers will not understand the nuances of the story without modifiers that—I admit—slow the reader down from getting to the “meat” of it.
The challenge is to find the balance. It’s a balance between style, creativity and traditional news writing. And that’s even in feature stories!
My editor told me—given the shrinking of the news hole—the opportunity to write scene setting openers to feature stories is disappearing. For one story, my editor said he’d wished I’d got to my nut graf a little quicker. And this story deserved a scene setting opener!
What I’ve learned: writing well is possible when using short, concise sentences. Readers are a bit impatient. They need to coaxed into exercising their brain muscles. Therefore, we writers can’t afford to take our time in getting to the point.
Writer shorter, keep your editor happy. And keep your lazy readers reading.
(How’d I do? Was that short-ish?)