<h3>A hands-on craft guide that turns rough first drafts into confident finished stories through practical example-led editing techniques for writers ready to do the work and sharpen their craft.</h3><p>If you want to transform raw ideas into effective storytelling too many writing books tell you <em>what</em> to fix in a draft but not <em>why</em> those fixes matter.</p><p></p><p><em>Tell Me (How to Write) A Story</em> is a practical guide for writers who want to turn rough first drafts into confident compelling stories. Because a good idea is not the same as a finished chapter. To get there you need tailored practice patience and clearer editing decisions.</p><p></p><p>Using real examples from beginner writers you'll learn how to tighten paragraphs strengthen dialogue control pacing and choose the right narrative approach for each moment in your story.</p><p></p><p>Structured in three progressive editing stages this book builds on your existing work so you can improve at your own pace. Instead of vague advice you'll learn clear usable techniques for identifying your specific weaknesses and how to edit with precision and purpose.</p><p></p><p>------</p><p></p><p>Practical encouraging and built on real examples rather than abstract rules this is a craft guide for anyone who has found writing books long on diagnosis and short on the why. Readers who value the hands-on editing focus of Renni Browne and Dave King's Self-Editing for Fiction Writers or the warm do-the-work spirit of Anne Lamott's Bird by Bird will feel right at home as will fans of classic craft writers like David Lodge and Arthur Plotnik.</p>