It was one of those helpful-not-helpful “writer” memes on Pinterest. It goes like this:
“The road to hell is paved with adverbs.”
What the what?
It’s like that trick: Quick: Don’t think of an elephant!
The only thing you can think of is a bloody elephant.
All I could see were the adverbs buried in my manuscript like evil little ninjas. It’s discouraging. I’ve already got a really sinister “inner editor”. It’s not like that bitch needs any help.
There had to be more to it, so researched this a bit. And, like any corrupted quote, it is misrepresented. The full sentence goes like this:
“I believe the road to hell is paved with adverbs, and I will shout it from the rooftops.”It’s part of a passage from Stephen King’s book On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft. He goes on to explain that adverbs start to spring up like dandelions on a yard. The first one or two may be a pass, but before you know it, you can have a yard full of them. The context was starting to make a bit more sense. And he introduced a more intriguing point: adverbs shouldn’t be attached to dialogue attribution. (You know the little things that are supposed to be seamless after quotes.)
I can get behind that thought. It is a lot more powerful to see something like:
“I won!” she shouted.Instead of:
“I won!” she said loudlyOne’s emotional and the other is well… lame.
So what I learn from this? There’s a context for all these “writing rules” out there. Have the brains to question them, especially the absolute ones. And I should really spend less time on Pinterest. The road to hell is paved with Pins.