Skip to main content

12 Nuggets of Writing Wisdom

by Shery Ma Belle Arrieta-Russ
 
 
1. Work hard to become competent.
 
Neil Gaiman said, "There's no magic formula. To become a competent writer, you 
write until you start to sound like you, and then you keep on writing. Finish 
things you start. Get better."
 
2. View life from different perspectives.
 
Douglas Clegg said, "Get out and live and travel and see the world from 
perspectives other than the one with which you've been saddled. Youth doesn't 
last very long, and it might be better to participate in life awhile before 
writing from it."
 
3. Write one page at a time.
 
John Steinbeck said, "When I face the desolate impossibility of writing 500 pages, 
a sick sense of failure falls on me and I know I can never do it. This happens 
every time. Then gradually I write one page and then another. One day's work is 
all I can permit myself to contemplate and I eliminate the possibility of ever 
finishing."
 
4. Strive for vigorous writing.
 
William Strunk, Jr. said, "Omit needless words. Vigorous writing is concise. A 
sentence should contain no unnecessary words, a paragraph no unnecessary 
sentences, for the same reason that a drawing should have no unnecessary lines 
and a machine no unnecessary parts."
 
5. Be vigilant and ever ready.
 
Earl Nightingale said, "Ideas are elusive, slippery things. Best to keep a pad of 
paper and a pencil at your bedside, so you can stab them during the night before 
they get away."
 
6. Develop your own writing voice.
 
Michael Chabon said, "A voice, not merely recognizable, but original, unique, 
engaging and above all derived from, reflecting, and advancing the meaning of 
the story itself, is necessary to good and worthwhile literature."
 
7. Write with confidence.
 
William Zinsser said, "Don't say you were a bit confused and sort of tired and 
a little depressed and somewhat annoyed. Be tired. Be confused. Be depressed. 
Be annoyed. Don't hedge your prose with little timidities. Good writing is lean 
and confident."
 
8. Develop a writing habit.
 
Richard North Patterson said, "Cultivate steady work habits: a schedule that 
contemplates either regular work hours every week or a certain number of pages. 
Artistic inspiration is one of the most overrated premises for a writing schedule; 
a writer should try to get pages done on a regular basis, then work to improve 
them. If one waits for inspiration, rather than treating writing like a serious 
task, it becomes much harder to ever finish a book."
 
9. Write right now.
 
Jack London said, "You can't wait for inspiration. You have to go after it with a 
club."
 
10. Venture out and attempt to be read and published.
 
John Campbell said, "The reason 99% of all stories written are not bought by 
editors is very simple. Editors never buy manuscripts that are left on the 
closet shelf at home."
 
11. Rejection is part of the writing life.
 
Meg Cabot said, "You are not a hundred dollar bill. Not everyone is going to 
like you or your story. Do not take rejection personally."
 
12. Write with passion.
 
Ann Patchett said, "The end result for a writer may be finding a publisher, but 
publishing is not anywhere near the beginning or the middle of this process. So 
when we advise young people about writing, it would be best if we could move 
students away from that kind of thinking and say, 'Write because you're passionate 
about it. Think of yourself as a glass blower. You don't blow your first glass 
and take it to Tiffany's. You blow your first glass, and you smash it. You blow 
it again, and you smash it.'" 
 
 
 
Copyright (c) 2004 Shery Ma Belle Arrieta-Russ
Shery created WriteSparks! - a software that generates over 10 *million* 
Story Sparkers for Writers. Download WriteSparks! Lite for fr*e -  
http://writesparks.com 

 
I hope today's article spurs you into action. Let the stories inside you 
spill out onto the page.

Popular posts from this blog

The Stories for Children Show with VS Grenier 04/09 by WorldOfInkNetwork

Author Nicole Borgenicht on Blog Talk Radio’s World of Ink Network show: St ories for Children – April 9, 2012   Blog Talk Radio’s World of Ink Network Show: Stories for Children with host VS Grenier and producer Irene Roth will be chatting with children’s author Nicole Borgenicht about her recently released children’s chapter book, The Kids of Dandelion Township. About the Book: The Kids of Dandelion Township is a story about new friends who in the process of discovering magic together, learn about their similar emotions and different cultures. All in the context of a child's day, the kids unravel mysteries of A students, and invent ways to be creative while completing their homework assignments. Preparing the way for children to receive magic, the kids of Dandelion Township wish all children will experience it one day. Get a sneak peek of the book at  http://youtu.be/rK3ChBjL5H0 About the author : Nicole Borgenicht is a children's fiction writer. Her most rece...

The Stories for Children show 11/14 by WorldOfInkNetwork | Blog Talk Radio

Blog Talk Radio’s World of Ink Network Show: Stories for Children will be chatting with award-winning authors Natasha Yim and Gretchen Maurer. Natasha Yim’s current book, Cixi, The Dragon Empress and Gretchen Maurer’s current book, Mary Tudor, “Bloody Mary” are two of the six books (all written by different authors) in Goosebottom Books’ series, The Thinking Girl’s Treasury of Dastardly Dames. The series profiles six women in history who have earned dastardly reputations. The show will air live November 14, 2011 at 2pm EST. You can find out more about Natasha Yim and Gretchen Maurer’s World of Ink Author/Book Tour schedule at http://storiesforchildrenpublishing.com/YimandMaurer.aspx The Stories for Children show 11/14 by WorldOfInkNetwork | Blog Talk Radio

WOI: Hear My Heart Books Owner Fawn Nielsen Speaks on Children in Crisis 08/26 by WorldOfInkNetwork | Family Podcasts

WOI: Hear My Heart Books Owner Fawn Nielsen Speaks on Children in Crisis 08/26 by WorldOfInkNetwork | Family Podcasts Welcome to the featured World of Ink Network here on BlogTalkRadio Wed. August 26, 2015. The World of Ink Network brings you shows each week on topics such as books, writing, author interviews, self-help and much more. Your hosts today are Virginia S Grenier and Marsha Cook. Today's show is about children and youth in crisis, the spirit and possiblilites for children and youth; as well as parents and teachers. We will also touch on bullying and its impact on society with Fawn Einarson-Nielsen, President of Hear My Heart Books Inc. (HMHB). Hear My Heart Books Inc. is incorporated in the province of Saskatchewan to focus on social entrepreneurship initiatives. Learn more at http://hearmyheartbooks.com Fawn is also the author of the children's book, " Spots, Dots...and the Nots?! " Our show will air live at 1pm Eastern - 12pm Centr...