(More) No Good Advice - Debbie Bennett
A couple of years back I wrote an agony
aunt page here on Authors Electric, so this month I thought I’d continue on
a similar theme, but more in the spirit of receiving, rather than giving advice
out like blue smarties. I mean there’s just so much advice out there, isn’t
there? Everywhere you look are helpful people telling you how to do things you
never even knew you should be doing!
Write what you
know! But I’m not an axe-murderer and there are no fairies at the bottom of
my garden…. You should always start a
novel with action. Well I’m sure we can all think of a hundred books that
start with something other than action. Write
every day. Plot everything/don’t plot everything. Write a synopsis before you
start/synopses are a waste of time. There are whole books about plot and
character development, what exactly a 3rd person deep POV means and
how and when to use it. You can drown in it all.
The point is that you can take advice until you’re blue
in the face. You can read how-to articles and books, go to classes every
evening that will tell you how to write, how to plot, how to structure, how to
make the tea and run your life. But none of that is actually writing, is it?
The internet is awash with people telling you what to
do. How to be better, smarter, faster, richer. Write a best-seller in ten days! There are probably several dozen
ebooks you can download for a few pounds that claim to teach you how to do that
– and they may well have great advice. But it’s just advice – it won’t do it for you.
To be a writer, you have to write. It sounds obvious,
but it isn’t to many people. You don’t have to submit your work anywhere or
even show it to anybody, but you do actually have to do it. Work. And it is
work – real bum on seat, get-on-with-it work. God knows, I’m the world’s biggest
procrastinator, but even I know that to be a writer, you have to write. You
figure out how it works as you go along, how to put it together and stitch your
story out of words. There’ll be a lot of false starts, blind alleys and
metaphorical screwing-up of paper – but it’s only by doing it that you learn
what works for you.
There is no substitute for action. Just do it. Write.
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