Chicago Freelance Fiction and Screenplay Writer
Chicago Freelance Writer, Ric Hess Writer's Quote from Graham Greene: "The moment comes when a character does or says something you hadn't thought about. At that moment he's alive and you leave it to him."
home fiction screenplays about Ric collaboration writer's resources contact Ric
Receive periodic updates on Ric's work:

RECENT BLOG POSTS

SUMMER WRITING PROJECT

CHICAGO WRITERS - view all

Road Blocks

Opening Day, an excerpt from a novel in progress by Chicago writer, Ric Hess

Opening Day, An Excerpt by Chicago Writer Ric Hess

FICTION WRITING - view all

Opening Day, an excerpt from a novel in progress by Chicago writer, Ric Hess

Opening Day, An Excerpt by Chicago Writer Ric Hess

Last Night in Twisted River: A Review

NONFICTION WRITING - view all

Win Some, Lose Some

Blogging through it

Building A Story One Brick at a Time

SCREENWRITING - view all

Convocations and Contacts

Conflicting Opinions: Between Barack and a hard place

Whats it all, about Alfy?

BUSINESS OF WRITING - view all

Those of you who are paying attention...

Playing the Odds

To Market to Market

WRITER'S RESOURCES

Favorite Websites
Books I recommend
Chicago Bookstores
Writer's Tools

ABOUT RIC HESS

Ric Hess is a Chicago-based writer with a passion for great storytelling. On this Website you'll find samples of Ric's work, a bit of commentary on the business of writing, and a few handy tools for other writers to reference. The content is in constant flux so check back often, and don't be afraid to throw in your own two cents if you read something that leaves you inspired or incensed; inspired is good, but incensed is often better. Or at least more interesting.

Ric specializes in noir fiction and true crime, his stories often constructed upon themes involving Chicago, Illinois, where he lives and works.

He is also a screenwriter interested in developing collaborative movie projects with an emphasis on settings here in Chicago. So if you've got an idea, give him a call.

 


Ric's Latest Blog Post

Whats it all, about Alfy?

Bookmark and Share

Today’s Chicago Tribune has an article about a couple of guys from a fancy-schmancy East Coast school who are roaming about the country pointing out grammatical errors as displayed on signs, store windows, flyers and the like. If it’s out there for public consumption, they’re going to remark on it. Then they confront the authors or their representatives and ask for the errors to be corrected. You can imagine the response – varying degrees of indifference, enthusiasm and hostility, with enthusiasm running a distant third. It seems to be the general opinion that these are just two eggheads with too much time on their hands. Et Too, Brute?

Dartmouth graduates Jeff Deck and Benjamin Herson are engaged in a Quixotian task – or perhaps it’s more Sisyphean but I digress. Most people, I assume, are going find their quest a bit ridiculous. What’s it matter if someone doesn’t know the difference between a Ladies room and a Lady’s room? War in Iraq, the dollar tanking, gas at four bucks a gallon and these guys are wasting their share of the world’s petrol roaming around correcting grammar.

Well, it does matter, and for writer’s most of all. In Get Shorty, Delroy Lindo’s character discusses the art of the screenplay with John Travolta. His basic premise is that the writing is secondary, that it’s all about the story and that you can “get someone to come in and fix all that other stuff afterwards”.

If you read enough screenplays, you’re inclined to think that Mr. Lindo may have been on to something. There are many writers who play fast and loose with language. Some engage in unconventional construction purposefully, as part of their craft – and that’s fine, sometimes even inspired – but you have to know the rules to break them.
Think about this; many people who take the time to read are pretty diligent readers. What do you do, as a reader, when you stumble across an error in the text? You stop, right? You make a mental correction and you divert your flow from the story that’s been building up in your mind’s eye. All of a sudden you’re not riding across the sage-covered plains or battling aliens, you’re reviewing your Strunk and White.

To me, anything that distracts the reader from my story is anathema; I treasure their attention. After all, they’re taking their time to read something that I’ve written. And if I’m trying to sell that something, I guard their interest all the more carefully. It’s just good business to write well; you’re a professional, write like one.

A few years ago I had the pleasure of having dinner with the author John Irving. We met near his home in Vermont and spent a few hours chatting about everything under the sun. It was one of the most memorable evenings of my life. Being the presumptuous person that I am, I brought along a manuscript. I proffered it and Mr. Irving was gracious enough to accept it for review. A few months later he wrote to me. Other than the social niceties and to comment very positively on some of my prose, he told me that my work would, in all probability, not receive serious consideration. I had too many grammatical errors. For example, I misused quotation marks on a regular basis. A quote would be written: “You, Ric, are a fucking moron”! she said. I placed the punctuation outside of the mark rather than within.

Imagine how I felt after I received that letter. Columbia College, Chicago, an otherwise fine school, is more interested in the creative process than the correct placement of commas and colons. In all the time I had been there no one ever called me on my mistakes. That’s no excuse, of course, I should have spent the time to learn the rules. You may rest assured that I got to work and figured things out after that. My only defense is to say that had you gone to high school where I did, you would have needed a little help in the English department as well. But then, you may well have gone out and got it.

But that’s all an aside. If you’re going to take the time to write, write well. Cormak McCarthy can write any damn way he pleases. You put a couple of No Country for Old Men under your belt and you can too. But until that day, you’d better pay attention to the way that readers read. It’s not cute to be uninformed or lazy. There’s plenty of that in the world without the perpetrators committing their ignorance to the page. There are no end of The Sound and the Fury fans who are going to dispute my opinion on this, but then you’re not William Faulkner. And anyway, really, that novel sucks.

I know that this isn’t going to change anything. There will not be a movement that springs forward from this moment, devoted to the possessive use of the apostrophe. And I know, now that I’ve hung my ass out there, someone’s going to consider this blog with a fine eye and point out all my mistakes. So just click on the contact Ric tab and have at it. I look forward to hearing from you. If I’m going to be a critic, I might as well have a little fun.

www.rghess.com, 2008 All rights reserved

— Ric Hess, May 21, 06:33 PM

---

Comment

  Textile Help

HOW TO CONTACT RIC

Online Form - go

E-mail:
rghess@rghess.com

Snail Mail:
Ric Hess
3258 N. Sheffield Avenue
Chicago, Illinios 60657

Telephone and Fax:
(773) 248-9181
(773) 248-9182 FAX

 

 

 


How I Spent My Summer Vacation
view blog entries

 


An exciting collection of short stories that explore how we as ordinary humans cope with circumstances that test our convictions, including work by Chicago writer
Ric Hess.
Learn more
Buy it now

Chicago Website Design by CeedWebDesign.com