How to Write a Review
An
easy to understand Online Writing Guide for beginning writers. Here you will find a list of various writing
models, general tips and hints to help guide you to writing success.
The big idea
Whenever
you're asked to decide whether something is good or bad--and then explain why
on paper--you're being asked to write a *review* or *evaluation*. This is a valuable style of writing to learn,
because even if you don't wind up writing book reviews for a living, you will
still need to make big decisions as an adult about which car or house to buy,
or which college to attend. The kind of
thinking you need to use in writing reviews is the kind of thinking you need to
make intelligent choices in life.
Before you begin
Step
One: Decide What To Look At
The
first thing you need to do before you start your review is decide what aspects
of the item you are going to evaluate.
What I mean is this: what is it that can be good or bad about something
you're going to review? An example: when
you're watching a movie, you can look at the acting, the special effects, the
camera work, or the story, among other things.
Those are all items you can examine and decide if they are well or
poorly done. With a book, you can look
at the plot, the characters, and the way that the author puts words
together. With a restaurant, you can
look at the food, the service, and the setting.
In fact, everything has qualities you can analyze and evaluate; you just
need to sit down and figure out what they are.
Step
Two: Decide What Makes Things Good or Bad
Before
you can decide whether something is good or bad, you have to figure out what
you mean by "good" and "bad." Do you like stories that have
a lot of action or a lot of character development? Do you like acting that's realistic or acting
that's wild and nutty? Do you like
authors to use a lot of complicated words, or very simple words? You decide.
Whatever you like, apply those standards to the thing you are reviewing.
How to do it
It
is now time to start putting your essay together. Here's a pretty simple format you can follow:
Open
with an introduction paragraph that does the following things:
catches
the reader's attention;
identifies
the thing you'll be reviewing (e.g., the title of the book or movie);
identifies
the author, star, or director, if appropriate.
Write
a full paragraph about each of the aspects you want to examine, making sure
each paragraph does these things:
opens
with a topic sentence that says what the paragraph is about;
has
several detail sentences that prove the point you are trying to make;
uses
quotes or examples from the book or movie, if possible, to help prove your
point.
End
with a conclusion paragraph that does the following:
*briefly*
restates the main ideas of the review;
makes
a judgment about the book or movie or whatever, saying whether it is good or
bad (some reviewers give ratings, like four stars or two thumbs up);
recommends
that the reader go to the movie or read the book or buy a meal at the
restaurant (or not, if it is no good).
It's
not often that one finds a novel as wacky and as full of unexpected surprises
as Losing Joe's Place, a book by Gordon Korman.
It is the story of Jason Cardone and his friends Ferguson "The
Peach" Peach and Don "Mr.
Wonderful" Champion, and a summer they spend in the big city of
Toronto, subletting the totally cool bachelor apartment that belongs to Jason's
brother, Joe. Joe's instructions to the
three teenagers boil down to one main thing: DON'T GET EVICTED! The story shows us just how hard it can be to
follow this one simple direction.
One
great thing about the book is the way Korman developed the characters. Each person has a definite personality. The Peach is an engineering genius who needs
to improve everything he sees. His
"better than you are" attitude tends to get on everyone's
nerves. Jason, our hero, seems to be
allergic to work, and while his roommates spend the summer slaving away at a
variety of jobs, Jason finds ways to avoid job interviews. At the same time, he becomes a genius in the
kitchen, which helps him later on in the story.
Mr. Plotnick, the boys' landlord
and owner of the Olympiad Delicatessen, is one of the greediest and most
annoying people you'll ever meet in a book, and the boys spend a lot of their
time trying to find ways to get even with him.
Perhaps one of the weirdest characters in the book is Rootbeer
Racinette, a huge bearded giant who can chew a hole in an unpoppable truck tire
and take a two-by-four in the stomach as hard as you'd care to swing it. Rootbeer spends the summer with the boys,
taking turns getting the boys into and out of trouble (between bouts of
Manchurian Bush Meditation and pursuing some of the strangest hobbies in the
world).
Another
great thing about the book is the plot.
Just as it seems that the boys are going to finally solve their problems
and have a great summer, another problem arises that they have to solve, or
else they will have to go back home to Owen Sound as the total failures that
their parents expect: they run out of money more than once; they fight over the
love of a girl they meet in Toronto, and they wind up becoming the secret
restaurant kings of the city, all because of a chocolate memory. Whenever you think that things can't get
worse, they can, and the whole book builds toward the finish that you hoped
couldn't happen...
Losing
Joe's Place is a great book for anyone who likes to see somebody else have a
whole lot of funny, funny troubles. The
story is hilarious and keeps you on the edge of your seat, and the characters
are strange and interesting enough to make you want to know more about what
will happen to them next. Out of four
stars, I would give this book at least three and a half.
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