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

Interview Friday with J.D. Holiday

J.D. Holiday is the author and illustrator of two children’s books: Janoose the Goose, picture book and a chapter book for six to eight year olds, THE GREAT SNOWBALL ESCAPADE. A chapbook of her short stories called, Trespasses was published in 1994 and she has had short stories printed in literary magazines and numerous articles about writing and publishing published.  She is a member of both The Society of Children’s Writers and Illustrators, (SCBWI) and Small Publishers of North America, (SPAN.)  J.D. Holiday lives in the Delaware Valley of Pennsylvania. VS : I want to thank you for being my guest here on The Writing Mama today. It is so exciting because you are my first World of Ink Tour Guest. It’s been a fun couple of days and the tour is only getting started. Okay, so I know your children are grown and out of the house, but I’m sure you’ve had to balance your writing life around them at one time or another. I know being a parent and writer can be hard and I find ...

5 Places to Find Writing Ideas

If you've ever struggled in coming up with creative ideas, welcome to the club. For most writers, discovering new writing projects involves conscious pursuit of their thought trails. But where do start on our quest for inspiration? Here are a few places you can find new ideas for writing: 1. The world around you. Just like a photographer, you must start looking at life through your own personal lens. You will get a tremendous amount of writing material if you start filtering your own experiences. Soon you will start noticing ideas everywhere around you. Very often the muse will come at strange times and from unusual sources, so be prepared. The world is full of surprises that can materialize in your next book or article. 2. Writers’ associations and networks. If you are a professional writer, you probably belong to an association or writer's group. Generating new ideas will feel much easier after meeting other members or attending writing workshops and conferences. You ...

Guest Post: Tips on Writing Your Memoirs

Whether you have lived a rough life or had a silver spoon in your mouth, it is normal to want to write your memoirs. This is especially true if you are getting up into middle age or beyond. Otherwise, it could be a pretty short story. Assuming you are ready to put 40 years or more down on paper, here are some tips for maximizing the effect of your finished work. First of all, give yourself plenty of time for a project like this. You are going to remember things as you work through the memories that are freshest in your mind. For this reason, it makes sense to give yourself lots of time, even as much as a year or more. Hopefully, you have a supply of old photographs you will be going through at the same time. But even if you don't, you can dig out those memories that are buried within. A good place to start is with a general time line of your life. You may find that you need to make more than one draft of this line, because you are likely to remember important ...