Durney TOP 1000 REVIEWER, VINE VOICE, June 2015 "I rank it with 'Better Times than These', 'The 13thy Valley'and 'Sand in the Wind' as some of the best fiction to come out of the war." - James W. Curnutt TOP 1000 REVIEWER, VINE VOICE, June 2015 ".you can't read this without it bringing back many memories." - William D. ".the victory is merely staying alive." - Charles Ashbacher HALL OF FAME, TOP 500 REVIEWER, VINE VOICE, June 2015 ".it's a gripping tale that will stick with you long after you finish with it.a great story." - Dennis Waller TOP 500 REVIEWER, June 2015 His style is strong, gnawing close to the bone." - Grady Harp HALL OF FAME,TOP 100 REVIEWER, VINE VOICE, April 2015 Chambers HALL OF FAME, TOP 10 REVIEWER, May 2015 It's some of the best war fiction that I've read." - J. I just think this is cool and wanted to pass it on. PS: I don’t have an affiliate or any other relationship with either company. Good luck with it, and pass it on to another writer! Though they were not working together when I wrote my Amazon bestselling novel, I did use them both, and now I’m using them together as I work on my next novel. If you are writing college papers or even a high school student writing a paper, together the Hemingway Editor and the Grammarly Chrome extension are powerful tools. Of course, once you do publish your novel you will need great reviews to help you ramp your sales, so I’ve also written another easy-to-follow guide that you can use to get reviews from top Amazon reviewers.Īnd this combination of Hemingway App and Grammarly is not just for writing fiction or writing a nonfiction book. No matter which creative writing prompt you start or what level your creative writing skills are at, you will need to polish your prose. For any writer in need of such support (I always am!), this is a new way to help you improve your writing. In my one-sentence example Hemingway did not flag anything, but in a longer entry, it would. When I click on that button…wow…what is loaded in the HemingwayApp now incorporates the changes that Grammarly recommended and I approved without me having to do any work to copy and past or otherwise transfer the (hopefully) grammatically correct copy to the HemingwayApp.įrom here I can go to work on the things that the HemingwayApp is good at flagging and Grammarly is not. And also look in the upper left-hand corner to see a button that offers me the opportunity to return to the HemingwayApp.
The sentence is now grammatically correct. I’m going to accept the two corrections Grammarly proposes (in green to the right) simply by clicking on the green text.
When I click on the red circle, look at what comes up (see below): a new Grammarly screen on top of the Hemingway screen (which you can still see in the background). You can see that Grammarly is already working it is reporting in the red circle that it has spotted two issues. I then typed in a sentence with a couple issues.
#HEMINGWAY EDITOR WEBSITE FREE#
In the screenshot below you can see that I have gone to the HemingwayApp site and that I have already loaded the free Grammarly Chrome Extension from the Chrome store. Sometimes it is wrong.īut be that as it is, these two writing apps now work together in powerful, simple ways that can help any aspiring writer, and do so for free. It is not flawless, though, so when you use it be attentive to what it calls out. I’ve always been a bit skeptical, but it does catch a lot of issues. They claim it is the best there is at doing such things. Such sentences can wreck havoc with your creative writing. I’ve long been fond of the HemingwayApp because it is a simple, free, very easy to use tool to help you spot and address long, complex, convoluted and adverb-heavy prose.
#HEMINGWAY EDITOR WEBSITE HOW TO#
It’s not the same as having a human editor, but if you are trying to figure out how to write a book, this combination can be a big help.
But now, with the Grammarly Chrome extension, not only can you use both of them, you can use both of them together. The Hemingway App has always been free, and Grammarly has a free version. Writers always need help with editing, so this is pretty damn cool: Two of my favorite tools are now working together for free.