Those wonderful words of wisdom! Ann Evans
My writing class |
I've been running a
writing class every Monday for the last few years, so constantly
giving out tips and advice to my students – or friends, as I tend
to think of them these days, as they've been coming to classes for so
long.
Each week, I like to
share a writing tip thought up by other writers, including some given
by our own team here on Authors Electric. Some of you knowledgeable
people kindly provided some 'words of wisdom' for my 'Become a
Writer' guide – which I'm currently bringing up to date – so I'll
be after you again, no doubt!
But for this blog, I
thought I'd share a few writing tips and quotes, that I've discovered
or been given over the years. Hope you enjoy them.
The secret of
becoming a writer is to write, write and keep on writing. Ken
MacLeod (Scottish science-fiction writer).
Words
- so innocent and powerless as they are, as standing in a dictionary,
how potent for good and evil they become in the hands of one who
knows how to combine them. Nathaniel
Hawthorne (19th
century American
novelist and short story writer.
What shouldn't
you do if you're a young playwright? Don't bore the audience! I mean,
even if you have to resort to totally arbitrary killing on stage, or
pointless gunfire, at least it'll catch their attention and keep them
awake. Just keep the thing going any way you can.
Tennessee Williams,
The Paris Review, 1981.
Tennessee Williams |
When you write,
you’re putting yourself on the page. Your manipulation of ideas,
your choice of words, the fluidity of your text – all these things
reflect your intellectual abilities. In other words, they demonstrate
the quality of your thinking. Think of
writing as performing two main functions: giving shape to your
thoughts, and communicating those thoughts to others. Bill
Kirton (British novelist and one of our Authors Electric team).
When you think
you’ve finished, put it to one side for a minimum of three weeks.
Don’t look at it, try not to even think of it. Then reread it. Then
tell yourself you have been told by a publisher to cut an infeasibly
large proportion – say ten per cent. And do it. Then read it to
yourself OUT LOUD. Always remember that the only person who knows
that something has been cut out is YOU. However much you love a
particular bit, it will not be missed.” Jan Needle (English
novelist and part of Authors Electric team).
Plot
is people. Human emotions and desires founded on the realities of
life, working at cross purposes, getting hotter and fiercer as they
strike against each other until finally there’s an explosion—that’s
Plot.
Leigh Brackett, WD (American novelist and screenwriter).
Don't say the old lady screamed. Bring her on and let her scream. Mark Twain.
Mark Twain |
Get into the scene late, get out of the scene early. David Mamet, American playwright, screenwriter and film director.
Don't
settle for the first idea you get, use it as a springboard for your
story and tweak it, stretch it, play with it until you get something
really strong and original.
Karen King (Author
of childrens and YA books, and romance).
Write
the kind of story you would like to read. People will give you all
sorts of advice about writing, but if you are not writing something
you like, no one else will like it either. Meg
Cabot (American
best selling author).
Always
be a poet, even in prose.
Charles Baudelaire (19th century French poet and essayist).
And finally, I love this famous quote by W.
Somerset Maugham:
There are three rules for writing a novel. Unfortunately, no one
knows what they are.
W.Somerset |
The best bit of
advice I remember being given was: “It won't write itself.”
What's the best bit
of writing advice you've ever heard?
Comments
What can I pass on... all the obvious ones really. Eliminate adverbs (or use sparingly - gaaah there's one). Show not Tell (though sometimes you just have to Tell Some Things). And feed your characters! Particularly if they are children. If you are going to send them on terrifying, fast-paced adventures doing battle with monsters etc they need Sustenance at some point in the story. Enid Blyton knew this (lashings of ginger beer, anyone?) as did C S Lewis.
As for more advice - the 4 tips I always offer would-be writers (and students in academic writing workshops) have already been covered by Jan:
• Trust your own voice
• Read your work aloud
• Leave as long a time as possible between the various drafts
• Cut, cut, cut.