How To Write Special Feature Articles eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 504 pages of information about How To Write Special Feature Articles.

How To Write Special Feature Articles eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 504 pages of information about How To Write Special Feature Articles.

A good title adds greatly to the attractiveness of an article.  In the first place, the title is the one thing that catches the eye of the editor or manuscript reader, as he glances over the copy, and if the title is good, he carries over this favorable impression to the first page or two of the article itself.  To secure such favorable consideration for a manuscript among the hundreds that are examined in editorial offices, is no slight advantage.  In the second place, what is true of the editor and the manuscript is equally true of the reader and the printed article.  No writer can afford to neglect his titles.

VARIETY IN FORM AND STYLE.  Because newspapers and magazines differ in the size and the “make-up” of their pages, there is considerable variety in the style of headlines and titles given to special feature articles.  Some magazine sections of newspapers have the full-size page of the regular edition; others have pages only half as large.  Some newspapers use large eight-column display heads on their special articles, while others confine their headlines for feature stories to a column or two.  Some papers regularly employ sub-titles in their magazine sections, corresponding to the “lines,” “banks,” and “decks” in their news headlines.  This variety in newspapers is matched by that in magazines.  Despite these differences, however, there are a few general principles that apply to all kinds of titles and headlines for special feature articles.

CHARACTERISTICS OF A GOOD TITLE.  To accomplish their purpose most effectively titles should be (1) attractive, (2) accurate, (3) concise, and (4) concrete.

The attractiveness of a title is measured by its power to arrest attention and to lead to a reading of the article.  As a statement of the subject, the title makes essentially the same appeal that the subject itself does; that is, it may interest the reader because the idea it expresses has timeliness, novelty, elements of mystery or romance, human interest, relation to the reader’s life and success, or connection with familiar or prominent persons or things.  Not only the idea expressed, but the way in which it is expressed, may catch the eye.  By a figurative, paradoxical, or interrogative form, the title may pique curiosity.  By alliteration, balance, or rhyme, it may please the ear.  It permits the reader to taste, in order to whet his appetite.  It creates desires that only the article can satisfy.

In an effort to make his titles attractive, a writer must beware of sensationalism and exaggeration.  The lurid news headline on the front page of sensational papers has its counterpart in the equally sensational title in the Sunday magazine section.  All that has been said concerning unwholesome subject-matter for special feature stories applies to sensational titles.  So, too, exaggerated, misleading headlines on news and advertisements are matched by exaggerated, misleading titles on special articles.  To state more than the facts warrant, to promise more than can be given, to arouse expectations that cannot be satisfied—­all are departures from truth and honesty.

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How To Write Special Feature Articles from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.