The one fastest, easiest way to immediately improve everything you write is to use descriptive verbs.
When you do, editors will take immediate notice. And they'll like what they see.
That's because most writers are lackadaisical about their verbs. As a result, their writing is "loose." It's got extra words in it.
But when your verbs are good, your writing is, by default, "tighter." That's because descriptive verbs help you paint pictures... and eliminate the need for adjectives and adverbs you'd otherwise have to rely on to do the job.
Let me show you what I mean.
Instead of:
The fisherman was sitting lightly on the edge of his boat with his shoulders slouched, looking at the water for fish.
Try:
The fisherman perched on the edge of the bow, scanning the water for fish.
[EDITOR'S NOTE: You may think that great writers are inspired writers. And maybe they are. Sometimes. But often they're simply paying close attention to the sorts of fundamentals like this one that Jen Stevens lays out in The Ultimate Travel Writer's Program.
And in it you'll find every technique, every secret, everything there is to know about how to turn an idea into a publishable piece... get what you've written into print... and then get paid for it...
