How To Write Like Malcolm Gladwell Series Vol 2.0
What you'll learn
- Write an introduction like Malcolm Gladwell
- Describe a person like Malcolm Gladwell
- Use statistics and facts like Malcolm Gladwell
- Write more persuasively
- Identify Gladwellian patterns of writing
- Have a deeper understanding of why and how Gladwell writes the way that he does
- Write a more compelling story
- Understand the fundamental things that make Gladwell a great author
Requirements
- None
Description
Welcome to the second course in my How to write like Malcolm Gladwell series.
Fewer than 1% of authors are published each year.
Agent receive thousands of proposals annually from writers and authors eager to make it to the New York Times bestseller list.
This course will take you thru the a b c's of what patterns are behind Gladwell's writing and what makes it so compelling.
This course goes into depth on:
- How to write an introduction like Malcolm Gladwell
- How to describe a person like Malcolm Gladwell
- How Gladwell uses statistics and facts
Whether it's Blink, the Tipping Point, or Outliers, we all know of a Gladwell book that has moved us and made us think differently.
In this course we break down Gladwell's writing and pick apart the writing style of one of the greatest authors of this century.
Who this course is for:
- Anyone interested in Malcolm Gladwell
- Students interested in improving their writing skills by learning from on of the greatest writers of the century
- Students who want to use the same writing patterns as Gladwell in their writing
- Students who want to write more persuasively
- Professional writers
- Students who want to become professional writers
- Anyone unsure of thier writing skills
- Students interested in becoming better storytellers
Instructor
Martin Kenny is the author of "Malibu Code: Learn HTML, CSS and JavaScript," a book that teaches the fundamentals of web design and interactive website programming through the metaphor of surfing. The original phrase, "surfing the web" comes from surfing, and yet no other web design or programming courses explore the power of the surfing metaphor beyond this common phrase.
In Martin's courses you will learn coding skills faster by building on top of ideas you already understand, instead of learning things from scratch. Much like surfing, many people give up on trying to learn how to code after their first few experiences with failure. Martin's courses are different because they explain everything in simple English and don't assume that you know anything about computers or programming or have any prior experience.