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Writing Under Pressure: The Quick Writing Process (Oxford paperbacks)

Writing Under Pressure: The Quick Writing Process (Oxford paperbacks)
By Sanford Kaye

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Product Description

Most writing is done under pressure. An executive has to produce a three-page position paper by tomorrow at nine. A department head suddenly has to write a one-page action memo by noon. A graduate student has a twenty-page research paper due in a week. Yet, while most students and professionals write under pressure--with limited time, limited space, and a supervisor or instructor to please--few approach the task systematically.

In Writing Under Pressure, Sanford Kaye, a renowned expert on the subject, presents a system he calls the Quick Writing Process (QWP) that focuses on real-world writing tasks and demonstrates how to produce the clearest, most honest, most powerful work possible under the constraints of time and space. A writing instructor with twenty-five years' experience teaching students and professionals in business and government, Kaye tells writers how to budget their time and how to use this time efficiently.

Exploring particular writing situations in which QWP can be applied to make the most of what the writer knows, Kaye discusses the process of taking exams, focusing on how instructors select questions and evaluate essays. He also considers writing in business and government, featuring an insightful analysis of a memo written by Colonel Oliver North. This memo highlights one of the most important issues writers in business and government face: whether to write the truth as they see it or simply what their bosses want to hear. Presenting a wealth of such examples, Kaye reveals how to break through stifling organizational codes in order to write memos and position papers that count.

While most guides to writing ignore the constraints of time and space, Writing Under Pressure tackles these problems head on, making it an essential reference for students, business professionals, government officials, or anyone else faced with a difficult writing assignment that has to be done now.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #190130 in Books
  • Published on: 1990-12-13
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 208 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

Review
"A useful system for getting started and getting finished."--Anne M. Durbin, Bryn Mawr College

"More useful than any comparable writer's handbook for the kind of writing that most students actually have to do."--Paul Teverow, Missouri Southern State College

"Upper division students invariably say that this is the most useful they have encountered in college on how to write."--Dr. Bill M. Donovan, Loyola College in Maryland

"A good book which I will order as an optional reading."Eric Graig, Queens College

"Will be enormously helpful to many different kinds of students. It directly and engagingly addresses real writers coping with real tasks, and presents practical solutions to common difficulties....Kaye avoids the egotism and artificiality that plague many who counsel beginning writers; he frees his reader to write independently, responsibly, and effectively in all circumstances."--Prudence L. Steiner, Director, Expository Writing Program, Harvard University Extension School

"This book tells us not just how to write, but how to live....[Kaye's] writer is a jujitsu artist who turns hostile, external pressure into force of feeling and expression."--Joseph G. Mayer, Principal Software Writer, Wang Laboratories, Inc.

"This is the best kind of writing book. Reading it lifts a veil from your eyes as it makes easily understandable those 'hidden' rules we've all occasionally followed, but have rarely if ever verbalized....A time-saver for anybody who writes under pressure."--Luis Hurtado-Sanchez, Integrated Office Systems Manager, Hewlett-Packard Company

"Kaye has done a great service to those of us...who must produce clear, persuasive, and action oriented writing as an essential part of our jobs....A useful and entertaining book."--Thomas J. Kelly, Vice President, IRM, Grumman Corporation

About the Author

Sanford Kaye is a teacher and consultant at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. He also teaches in the Harvard University Extension School and is the Director of the Essential Skills Center at Curry College. He co-founded the Writing Program at MIT and was a former Director of the Sloan Fellows Executive Training Program Writing Seminars.


Customer Reviews

Truly humane gem on writing, politics, society5
If revolutionaries were also great teachers, or great teacher also revolutionaries, they would write books like this.

For those seeking help with their writing, no book will do a better job. This is a book about writing that truly recognizes the profound difficulties that everyone, beginner or published author, encounters in trying to make what they say clear, and in trying to clarify for themselves what they want to say. It addresses these problems by cutting through all the myths about writing and gets to the heart of the matter by giving you a surprisingly practical technique for digging out the things you really want to say and for giving them a crisp, articulate, and elegant form. Use this book and writing really will get easier and more fulfilling, and right away. You won't believe how easy it is to say what you want to say.

But this isn't just a book about writing -- at least not if you think writing is just about putting words on the page. Kaye also tells us something about writing that few have seen before -- something so elementary that once you see it, you can't believe you (and everyone else) ever missed it.

Boiled down, it is this: the great struggle to express that makes so many of us so insecure really is, in part, a handicap imposed on us by the culture in which we are raised, educated, and shaped. That culture, Kaye suggests, wants us mute. Voiceless, we will not rock the boat, question the way things are, or articulate alternatives. To this end, it tears us down from the moment we start trying to express ourselves, teaching us time and time again that our ideas make no sense and that our efforts at expression are embarassingly clumsy. Ashamed, we shut up, and stop trying to tell the world about our insights, our passions, or ourselves. And unable to say what we wish we could say, we gradually forget that we even wanted to say it.

This is a profoundly humane account of the struggles we all have writing. It tells us what few of us would dare believe on our own -- that the difficulty we have making our ideas understood isn't really about our own intelligence or artistic capacity or charisma, but about this culture's relentless effort to shame us into quiet conformity.

Proufoundly humane, this view is also therefore radical. Not like Stalin or Castro, though, for it doesn't ask us to sacrifice ourselves for some ideal. No, what's really radical about this radical view is that it reaches out to help us. It helps us express ourselves, and thus empowers us.

Kaye wants to change the world, but he knows that for the world to change, YOU have to be able to say what you want to say. God knows where that leaves him, but for you the results are all good: this book REALLY does want you to find your voice, and it goes after it with both a teacher's touch and a revolutionary's zeal.

God knows, its helped me.

This is the Writing book you want on your shelf5
When I first got into college, I had absolutely no idea how to
write. I had written papers in high school, yet it had always been an agonizing process. As a result, I dreaded every paper assignment, and put off writing until the last minute. Then, one day, in the midst of such procrastination, I discovered this book on the library's shelf.

Shelved between two books on grammar, this book looked like another long-winded treatise on sentence construction. Yet after opening the book, I was pleasantly surprised.

Sanford Kaye's book, Writing Under Pressure, puts forth an interesting, well thought out strategy for writing papers. Through a case study, and then specific applications, he outlines his strategy in a clear, easily understandable way that is immediately applicable. Yet this is not this book's main strength. Kaye clearly loves writing, and he communicates this in a way that makes the reader feel the same way. Now, this is the book I turn to whenever I feel overwhelmed by a writing task. So if you are looking for a book on writing, or even if you are not, you cannot do better than Sanford Kaye's Writing Under Pressure.

If you can read, you can write . . .5
This book takes the !!ARRGH!! out of writing. Concentrating on academic assignments, the author, who has been there-done that, lets students in on his secrets of how to relax and make ANY subject interesting to the writer - and, therefore, the reader. Writing Under Pressure is clearly written (the author practices what he preaches), but contains enough lightness and human touches to make you forget you're not reading it for pleasure. I would recommend this book to someone who is learning (or re-learning) how to write assigned term papers or essays.