β
Don't bend; don't water it down; don't try to make it logical; don't edit your own soul according to the fashion. Rather, follow your most intense obsessions mercilessly.
β
β
Franz Kafka
β
So the writer who breeds more words than he needs, is making a chore for the reader who reads.
β
β
Dr. Seuss
β
Kill your darlings, kill your darlings, even when it breaks your egocentric little scribblerβs heart, kill your darlings.
β
β
Stephen King (On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft)
β
A professional writer is an amateur who didn't quit.
β
β
Richard Bach
β
Put down everything that comes into your head and then you're a writer. But an author is one who can judge his own stuff's worth, without pity, and destroy most of it."
(Casual Chance, 1964)
β
β
Colette Gauthier-Villars
β
To write is human, to edit is divine.
β
β
Stephen King (On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft)
β
Making love to me is amazing. Wait, I meant: making love, to me, is amazing. The absence of two little commas nearly transformed me into a sex god.β¨
β
β
Dark Jar Tin Zoo (Love Quotes for the Ages. Specifically Ages 19-91.)
β
I'm writing a first draft and reminding myself that I'm simply shoveling sand into a box so that later I can build castles.
β
β
Shannon Hale
β
When you write a book, you spend day after day scanning and identifying the trees. When youβre done, you have to step back and look at the forest.
β
β
Stephen King (On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft)
β
Those who are not shocked when they first come across quantum theory cannot possibly have understood it.
β
β
Niels Bohr (Essays 1932-1957 on Atomic Physics and Human Knowledge (The Philosophical Writings of Niels Bohr, Vol. 2) (English and Danish Edition))
β
You can't edit a blank page
β
β
Nora Roberts
β
You can always edit a bad page. You can't edit a blank page.
β
β
Jodi Picoult
β
Remove the comma, replace the comma, remove the comma, replace the comma...
β
β
R.D. Ronald
β
I've found the best way to revise your own work is to pretend that somebody else wrote it and then to rip the living shit out of it.
β
β
Don Roff
β
Genius, in truth, means little more than the faculty of perceiving in an unhabitual way.
β
β
William James (The Writings of William James: A Comprehensive Edition)
β
It is perfectly okay to write garbage--as long as you edit brilliantly.
β
β
C.J. Cherryh
β
Write drunk; edit sober.
β
β
Peter De Vries (Reuben, Reuben)
β
Writing without revising is the literary equivalent of waltzing gaily out of the house in your underwear.
β
β
Patricia Fuller
β
The mind I love most must have wild places, a tangled orchard where dark damsons drop in the heavy grass, an overgrown little wood, the chance of a snake or two, a pool that nobody fathomed the depth of, and paths threaded with flowers planted by the mind.
β
β
Katherine Mansfield (Katherine Mansfield Notebooks: Complete Edition)
β
The worst thing you can do is censor yourself as the pencil hits the paper. You must not edit until you get it all on paper. If you can put everything down, stream-of-consciousness, you'll do yourself a service.
β
β
Stephen Sondheim
β
Your life is your story. Write well. Edit often.
β
β
Susan Statham
β
If writers write, then rangers range. And Iβd like to wake up every morning and be a mother, so I could eat my own clothes.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
Edit your manuscript until your fingers bleed and you have memorized every last word. Then, when you are certain you are on the verge of insanity...edit one more time!
β
β
C.K. Webb
β
Nothing says work efficiency like panic mode.
β
β
Don Roff
β
While writing is like a joyful release, editing is a prison where the bars are my former intentions and the abusive warden my own neuroticism.
β
β
Tiffany Madison
β
Without poets, without artists... everything would fall apart into chaos. There would be no more seasons, no more civilizations, no more thought, no more humanity, no more life even; and impotent darkness would reign forever. Poets and artists together determine the features of their age, and the future meekly conforms to their edit.
β
β
Guillaume Apollinaire (Selected Writings)
β
Don't look back until you've written an entire draft, just begin each day from the last sentence you wrote the preceding day. This prevents those cringing feelings, and means that you have a substantial body of work before you get down to the real work which is all in ... the edit."
[Ten rules for writing fiction (part two), The Guardian, 20 February 2010]
β
β
Will Self
β
I want to create moonglasses, and then write a song called, "I Wear My Moonglasses at Noon." Hopefully, with a little lunar luck, my track will also feature Corey Hart.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
We live in a world where bad stories are told, stories that teach us life doesn't mean anything and that humanity has no great purpose. It's a good calling, then, to speak a better story. How brightly a better story shines. How easily the world looks to it in wonder. How grateful we are to hear these stories, and how happy it makes us to repeat them.
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
Reading list (1972 edition)[edit]
1. Homer β Iliad, Odyssey
2. The Old Testament
3. Aeschylus β Tragedies
4. Sophocles β Tragedies
5. Herodotus β Histories
6. Euripides β Tragedies
7. Thucydides β History of the Peloponnesian War
8. Hippocrates β Medical Writings
9. Aristophanes β Comedies
10. Plato β Dialogues
11. Aristotle β Works
12. Epicurus β Letter to Herodotus; Letter to Menoecus
13. Euclid β Elements
14. Archimedes β Works
15. Apollonius of Perga β Conic Sections
16. Cicero β Works
17. Lucretius β On the Nature of Things
18. Virgil β Works
19. Horace β Works
20. Livy β History of Rome
21. Ovid β Works
22. Plutarch β Parallel Lives; Moralia
23. Tacitus β Histories; Annals; Agricola Germania
24. Nicomachus of Gerasa β Introduction to Arithmetic
25. Epictetus β Discourses; Encheiridion
26. Ptolemy β Almagest
27. Lucian β Works
28. Marcus Aurelius β Meditations
29. Galen β On the Natural Faculties
30. The New Testament
31. Plotinus β The Enneads
32. St. Augustine β On the Teacher; Confessions; City of God; On Christian Doctrine
33. The Song of Roland
34. The Nibelungenlied
35. The Saga of Burnt NjΓ‘l
36. St. Thomas Aquinas β Summa Theologica
37. Dante Alighieri β The Divine Comedy;The New Life; On Monarchy
38. Geoffrey Chaucer β Troilus and Criseyde; The Canterbury Tales
39. Leonardo da Vinci β Notebooks
40. NiccolΓ² Machiavelli β The Prince; Discourses on the First Ten Books of Livy
41. Desiderius Erasmus β The Praise of Folly
42. Nicolaus Copernicus β On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres
43. Thomas More β Utopia
44. Martin Luther β Table Talk; Three Treatises
45. FranΓ§ois Rabelais β Gargantua and Pantagruel
46. John Calvin β Institutes of the Christian Religion
47. Michel de Montaigne β Essays
48. William Gilbert β On the Loadstone and Magnetic Bodies
49. Miguel de Cervantes β Don Quixote
50. Edmund Spenser β Prothalamion; The Faerie Queene
51. Francis Bacon β Essays; Advancement of Learning; Novum Organum, New Atlantis
52. William Shakespeare β Poetry and Plays
53. Galileo Galilei β Starry Messenger; Dialogues Concerning Two New Sciences
54. Johannes Kepler β Epitome of Copernican Astronomy; Concerning the Harmonies of the World
55. William Harvey β On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals; On the Circulation of the Blood; On the Generation of Animals
56. Thomas Hobbes β Leviathan
57. RenΓ© Descartes β Rules for the Direction of the Mind; Discourse on the Method; Geometry; Meditations on First Philosophy
58. John Milton β Works
59. MoliΓ¨re β Comedies
60. Blaise Pascal β The Provincial Letters; Pensees; Scientific Treatises
61. Christiaan Huygens β Treatise on Light
62. Benedict de Spinoza β Ethics
63. John Locke β Letter Concerning Toleration; Of Civil Government; Essay Concerning Human Understanding;Thoughts Concerning Education
64. Jean Baptiste Racine β Tragedies
65. Isaac Newton β Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy; Optics
66. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz β Discourse on Metaphysics; New Essays Concerning Human Understanding;Monadology
67. Daniel Defoe β Robinson Crusoe
68. Jonathan Swift β A Tale of a Tub; Journal to Stella; Gulliver's Travels; A Modest Proposal
69. William Congreve β The Way of the World
70. George Berkeley β Principles of Human Knowledge
71. Alexander Pope β Essay on Criticism; Rape of the Lock; Essay on Man
72. Charles de Secondat, baron de Montesquieu β Persian Letters; Spirit of Laws
73. Voltaire β Letters on the English; Candide; Philosophical Dictionary
74. Henry Fielding β Joseph Andrews; Tom Jones
75. Samuel Johnson β The Vanity of Human Wishes; Dictionary; Rasselas; The Lives of the Poets
β
β
Mortimer J. Adler (How to Read a Book: The Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading)
β
You write to communicate to the hearts and minds of others what's burning inside you. And we edit to let the fire show through the smoke.
β
β
Arthur Plotnik
β
I don't remember Moses writing, 'Thou shalt not kill.. unless you think you have a good reason.
β
β
Willie Nelson (The Tao of Willie: A Guide to the Happiness in Your Heart, Library Edition)
β
Perfectionism means that you try desperately not to leave so much mess to clean up. But clutter and mess show us that life is being lived. Clutter is wonderfully fertile ground - you can still discover new treasures under all those piles, clean things up, edit things out, fix things, get a grip. Tidiness suggests that something is as good as it's going to get. Tidiness makes me think of held breath, of suspended animation, while writing needs to breathe and move.
β
β
Anne Lamott (Bird by Bird)
β
Our dreams recover what the world forgets.
β
β
James Hillman (Animal Presences (Uniform Edition of the Writings of James Hillman Book 9))
β
When Roseanne read the first script of mine that got into her hands without being edited by someone else she said, 'How can you write a middle-aged woman this well?' I said, 'If you met my mom you wouldn't ask'.
β
β
Joss Whedon
β
Editing fiction is like using your fingers to untangle the hair of someone you love.
β
β
stephanie roberts
β
I edit my own stories to death. They eventually run and hide from me.
β
β
Jeanne Voelker
β
The voice of a Black woman should always be HERSELF ...
No edits - no erasure - no pressure - no expectations - no additions - no intruders
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β
Malebo Sephodi
β
...our relationship was like a Word document that we were writing and editing together, or a long private joke which nobody else could understand.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Conversations with Friends)
β
Let the reader find that he cannot afford to omit any line of your writing because you have omitted every word that he can spare.
β
β
Ralph Waldo Emerson
β
Finished crap can be edited. Unfinished greatness languishes forever. The only bad writing is the thing you didn't write!
β
β
Margarita Gakis
β
Flow is something the reader experiences, not the writer.
β
β
Verlyn Klinkenborg
β
As the ego does not represent the whole psyche, so the Western mind cannot speak for the whole world.
β
β
James Hillman (Philosophical Intimations (Uniform Edition of the Writings of James Hillman Book 8))
β
To be taught to readβwhat is the use of that, if you know not whether what you read is false or true? To be taught to write or to speakβbut what is the use of speaking, if you have nothing to say? To be taught to thinkβnay, what is the use of being able to think, if you have nothing to think of? But to be taught to see is to gain word and thought at once, and both true.
β
β
John Ruskin (The Works of John Ruskin: Library Edition. 39 vols.)
β
I realized that the good stories were affecting the organs of my body in various ways, and the really good ones were stimulating more than one organ. An effective story grabs your gut, tightens your throat, makes your heart race and your lungs pump, brings tears to your eyes or an explosion of laughter to your lips.
β
β
Christopher Vogler (The Writers Journey: Mythic Structure for Writers, 2nd Edition)
β
You might not write well every day, but you can always edit a bad page. You can't edit a blank page.
β
β
Jodi Picoult
β
It's the living that turn and chase the dead. The long bones and skulls are tumbled from their shrouds, and words like stones thrust into their rattling mouths: we edit their writings, we rewrite their lives.
β
β
Hilary Mantel (Wolf Hall (Thomas Cromwell, #1))
β
We never end up with the book we began writing. Characters twist it and turn it until they get the life that is perfect for them. A good writer won't waste their time arguing with the characters they create...It is almost always a waste of time and people tend to stare when you do!
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β
C.K. Webb
β
Only God gets it right the first time and only a slob says, "Oh well, let it go, that's what copyeditors are for.
β
β
Stephen King (On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft)
β
Book of Ecclesiastes, God is saying...
Write a good story, take somebody with you and let me help
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
The advice to "kill your darlings" has been attributed to various authors across the various galaxies... and Mister Heist hated them all.
Why teach young writers to edit out whatever it is they feel most passionate about?
Better to kill everything in their writing they DON'T love as much.
Until only the darlings remain.
β
β
Brian K. Vaughan (Saga, Volume 3)
β
So it is written - but so, too, it is crossed out. You can write it over again. You can make notes in the margins. You can cut out the whole page. You can, and you must, edit and rewrite and reshape and pull out the wrong parts like bones and find just the thing and you can forever, forever, write more and more and more, thicker and longer and clearer. Living is a paragraph, constantly rewritten. It is Grown-Up Magic. Children are heartless; their parents hold them still, squirming and shouting, until a heart can get going in their little lawless wilderness. Teenagers crash their hearts into every hard and thrilling thing to see what will give and what will hold. And Grown-Ups, when they are very good, when they are very lucky, and very brave, and their wishes are sharp as scissors, when they are in the fullness of their strength, use their hearts to start their story over again.
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β
Catherynne M. Valente (The Girl Who Soared Over Fairyland and Cut the Moon in Two (Fairyland, #3))
β
Here's the truth about telling stories with your life. It's going to sound like a great idea, and you're going to get excited about it, and then when it comes time to do the work, you're not going to want to do it. It's like that with writing books, and it's like that with life. People love to have lived a great story, but few people like the work it takes to make it happen. But joy costs pain.
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β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
Write from the heart, edit from the head,
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β
Stuart Aken
β
And yet not every sense of what's good and right can be trusted, for what else is war but two sides going to battle over what each thinks is right?
β
β
Anne Frank (Anne Frank's Tales from the Secret Annex: A Collection of Her Short Stories, Fables, and Lesser-Known Writings, Revised Edition)
β
If I can only write my memoir once, how do I edit it?
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S. Kelley Harrell
β
The first draft is black and white. Editing gives the story color.
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Lucy Anne Holland
β
Your life is a blank page. You write on it.
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Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
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When I'm writing, I make words my b*tch. But when I'm editing, the words make me their b*tch. It all equals out in the end.
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Richard B. Knight
β
He captures memories because if he forgets them, it's as though they didn't happen.
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Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
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There is no great writing, only great rewriting.
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Justice Louis Brandeis
β
Write like you're in love. Edit like you're in charge.
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β
James Scott Bell
β
Capote's rejoinder to Kerouac's assertion that he never needed to edit his work....."But, that's not writing . That's typing.
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Truman Capote
β
I laughed to myself although there was no one there to see me. I loved when he was available to me like this, when our relationship was like a Word document that we were writing and editing together, or a long private joke that nobody else could understand. I liked to feel that he was my collaborator. I liked to think of him waking up at night and thinking of me.
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Sally Rooney (Conversations with Friends)
β
I have always believed in the principle that immediate survival is more important than long-term survival.
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Jack McClelland (Imagining Canadian Literature: The Selected Letters)
β
I am hard at work on the second draft ... Second draft is really a misnomer as there are a gazillion revisions, large and small, that go into the writing of a book.
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Libba Bray
β
Writing
is therapeutic. It helps you cope with issues that seem gargantuan at the time.
The process of expressing yourself about a problem, editing your thoughts, and
writing some more can help you control issues that you face.
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β
Guy Kawasaki (APE: Author, Publisher, Entrepreneur. How to Publish a Book)
β
I went to the shoemaker to collect his wastepaper. One of them asked me if my book was communistic. I replied that it was realistic. He cautioned me that it was not wise to write of reality.
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Carolina Maria de Jesus (Child of the Dark: The Diary of Carolina Maria de Jesus, 50th Anniversary Edition)
β
... The Book is more important than your plans for it. You have to go with what works for The Book ~ if your ideas appear hollow or forced when they are put on paper, chop them, erase them, pulverise them and start again. Don't whine when things are not going your way, because they are going the right way for The Book, which is more important. The show must go on, and so must The Book.
β
β
E.A. Bucchianeri
β
Modern women are frustrated and angry, their experience is limited; modern men are obsessed with the letter βIβ; their writing is full of self-conscious indecency, self-conscious virility. It is essentially sterile.
β
β
Virginia Woolf (A Room Of One's Own: The Virginia Woolf Library Authorized Edition)
β
He knows different now. It's the living that chase the dead. The long bones and skulls are tumbled from their shrouds, and words like stones thrust into their rattling mouths: we edit their writings, we rewrite their lives. Thomas More had spread the rumor that Little Bilney, chained to the stake, had recanted as the fire was set. It wasn't enough for him to take Bilney's life away; he had to take his death too.
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Hilary Mantel (Wolf Hall (Thomas Cromwell, #1))
β
Write poorly.
Suck.
Write Awful.
Terribly.
Frightfully.
Donβt care.
Turn off the inner editor.
Let yourself write.
Let it flow.
Let yourself fail.
Do something crazy.
Write 50,000 words in the month of November.
I did it.
It was fun.
It was insane.
It was 1,667 words per day.
It was possible, but you have to turn off the inner critic off completely.
Just write.
Quickly.
In bursts.
With joy.
If you canβt write, run away.
Come back.
Write again.
Writing is like anything else.
You wonβt get good at it immediately.
Itβs a craft.
You have to keep getting better.
You donβt get to Juilliard unless you practice.
You want to get to Carnegie Hall?
Practice. Practice. Practice ..or give them a lot of money.
Like anything else it takes 10,000 hours to get to mastery.
Just like Malcolm Gladwell says.
So write.
Fail.
Get your thoughts down.
Let it rest.
Let is marinate.
Then edit, but donβt edit as you type.
That just slows the brain down.
Find a daily practice.
For me itβs blogging.
Itβs fun.
The more you write the easier it gets.
The more it is a flow, the less a worry.
Itβs not for school, itβs not for a grade, itβs just to get your thoughts out there.
You know they want to come out.
So keep at it.
Make it a practice.
Write poorly.
Write awfully.
Write with abandon and it may end up being really really good.
β
β
Colleen Hoover
β
We all know, of course, what to make of our newspapers. The deaf man writes down what the blind man has told him, the village idiot edits it, and their colleagues in the other press houses copy it. Each story is doused afresh with the same stagnant infusion of lies, so that the βsplendidβ brew can then be served up to a clueless Volk.
β
β
Timur Vermes (Look Who's Back)
β
There is, in fact, not much point in writing a novel unless you can show the possibility of moral transformation, or an increase in wisdom, operating in your chief character or characters. Even trashy bestsellers show people changing. When a fictional work fails to show change, when it merely indicates that human character is set, stony, unregenerable, then you are out of field of the novel and into that of the fable or the allegory.
- from the introduction of the 1986 Norton edition
β
β
Anthony Burgess (A Clockwork Orange)
β
She and Roman would survive this war. They would have the chance to grow old together, year by year. They would be friends until they both finally acknowledged the truth. And they would have everything that other couples hadβthe arguments and the hand-holding in the market and the gradual exploration of their bodies and the birthday celebrations and the journeys to new cities and the living as one and sharing a bed and the gradual sense of melting into each other. Their names would be entwinedβRoman and Iris or Winnow and Kitt because could you truly have one without the other?βand they would write on their typewriters and ruthlessly edit each otherβs pieces and read books by candlelight at night.
β
β
Rebecca Ross (Divine Rivals (Letters of Enchantment, #1))
β
Nora Stephens,β he says, βIβve racked my brain and this is the best I can come up with, so I really hope you like it.β
His gaze lifts, everything about it, about his face, about his posture, about him made up of sharp edges and jagged bits and shadows, all of it familiar, all of it perfect. Not for someone else, maybe, but for me.
βI move back to New York,β he says. βI get another editing job, or maybe take up agenting, or try writing again. You work your way up at Loggia, and weβre both busy all the time, and down in Sunshine Falls, Libby runs the local business she saved, and my parents spoil your nieces like the grandkids they so desperately want, and Brendan probably doesnβt get much better at fishing, but he gets to relax and even take paid vacations with your sister and their kids. And you and Iβwe go out to dinner.
βWherever you want, whenever you want. We have a lot of fun being city people, and weβre happy. You let me love you as much as I know I can, for as long as I know I can, and you have it fucking all. Thatβs it. Thatβs the best I could come up with, and I really fucking hope you sayββ
I kiss him then, like there isnβt someone reading one of the Bridgerton novels five feet away, like weβve just found each other on a deserted island after months apart. My hands in his hair, my tongue catching on his teeth, his palms sliding around behind me and squeezing me to him in the most thoroughly public groping weβve managed yet.
βI love you, Nora,β he says when we pull apart a few inches to breathe. βI think I love everything about you.
β
β
Emily Henry (Book Lovers)
β
Do not put statements in the negative form.
And don't start sentences with a conjunction.
If you reread your work, you will find on rereading that a
great deal of repetition can be avoided by rereading and editing.
Never use a long word when a diminutive one will do.
Unqualified superlatives are the worst of all.
De-accession euphemisms.
If any word is improper at the end of a sentence, a linking verb is.
Avoid trendy locutions that sound flaky.
Last, but not least, avoid cliches like the plague.
β
β
William Safire
β
Editors can be stupid at times. They just ignore that authorβs intention. I always try to read unabridged editions, so much is lost with cut versions of classic literature, even movies donβt make sense when they are edited too much. I love the longueurs of a book even if they seem pointless because you can get a peek into the authorβs mind, a glimpse of their creative soul. I mean, how would people like it if editors came along and said to an artist, βWhoops, you left just a tad too much space around that lily pad there, lets crop that a bit, shall we?β. Monet would be ripping his hair out.
β
β
E.A. Bucchianeri (Brushstrokes of a Gadfly (Gadfly Saga, #1))
β
This is my attempt to make sense of the period that followed, weeks and then months that cut loose any fixed idea I had ever had about death, about illness, about probability and luck, about good fortune and bad, about marriage and children and memory, about grief, about the ways in which people do and do not deal with the fact that life ends, about the shallowness of sanity, about life itself. I have been a writer my entire life. As a writer, even as a child, long before what I wrote began to be published, I developed a sense that meaning itself was resident in the rhythms of words and sentences and paragraphs, a technique for withholding whatever it was I thought or believed behind an increasingly impenetrable polish. The way I write is who I am, or have become, yet this is a case in which I wish I had instead of words and their rhythms a cutting room, equipped with an Avid, a digital editing system on which I could touch a key and collapse the sequence of time, show you simultaneously all the frames of memory that come to me now, let you pick the takes, the marginally different expressions, the variant readings of the same lines. This is a case in which I need more than words to find the meaning. This is a case in which I need whatever it is I think or believe to be penetrable, if only for myself.
β
β
Joan Didion (The Year of Magical Thinking)
β
He was tall in the bed and I could see the silver through his eyelids. His soul sat up. It met me. Those kinds of souls always doβthe best ones. The ones who rise up and say, βI know who you are and I am ready. Not that I want to go, of course, but I will come.β Those souls are always light because more of them have been put out. More of them have already found their way to other places. This one was sent out by the breath of an accordion, the odd taste of champagne in summer, and the art of promise-keeping. He lay in my arms and rested. There was an itchy lung for a last cigarette and an immense, magnetic pull toward the basement, for the girl who was his daughter and was writing a book down there that he hoped to read one day.
β
β
Markus Zusak (The Book Thief)
β
In front of me 327 pages of the manuscript [Master and Margarita] (about 22 chapters). The most important remains - editing, and it's going to be hard. I will have to pay close attention to details. Maybe even re-write some things... 'What's its future?' you ask? I don't know. Possibly, you will store the manuscript in one of the drawers, next to my 'killed' plays, and occasionally it will be in your thoughts. Then again, you don't know the future. My own judgement of the book is already made and I think it truly deserves being hidden away in the darkness of some chest.
[Bulgakov from Moscow to his wife on June 15 1938]
β
β
Mikhail Bulgakov
β
If every minute of time elapsed on the screen equals in length of time every other minute, and obviously it does, and if time on the screen equals importance to the audience, that is, one minute of screen time gives equal weight to the emotional, dramatic, narrative, and every other aspect of experiencing a movie as every other minute, and it does, then we know something important we need to know about screenplays.
β
β
Dan J. Decker (ANATOMY OF A SCREENPLAY THIRD EDITION)
β
The Scholars
"Bald heads forgetful of their sins,
Old, learned, respectable bald heads
Edit and annotate the lines
That young men, tossing on their beds,
Rhymed out in loveβs despair
To flatter beautyβs ignorant ear.
Theyβll cough in the ink to the worldβs end;
Wear out the carpet with their shoes
Earning respect; have no strange friend;
If they have sinned nobody knows.
Lord, what would they say
Should their Catullus walk that way?
β
β
W.B. Yeats (The Wild Swans At Coole)
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This guy is different. I see him once in a while and we have fun and theres no pressure. We just have a good time. And he still writes for tranks and downers. A couple of weeks ago we flew down to the Virgin Islands for a weekend. It was a ball. Hey, crazy. Sounds great. Yeah. So your folks are still footin the bills, tilting his head toward the rest of the apartment, for the pad and so forth? Yeah. She laughed out loud again, Plus the fifty a week for the shrink. And sometimes I do a little freelance editing for a few publishers. And the rest of the time you just lay up and get high, eh? She smiled, Something like that.
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Hubert Selby Jr. (Requiem for a Dream)
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Not long ago, I advertised for perverse rules of grammar, along the lines of "Remember to never split an infinitive" and "The passive voice should never be used." The notion of making a mistake while laying down rules ("Thimk," "We Never Make Misteaks") is highly unoriginal, and it turns out that English teachers have been circulating lists of fumblerules for years. As owner of the world's largest collection, and with thanks to scores of readers, let me pass along a bunch of these never-say-neverisms:
* Avoid run-on sentences they are hard to read.
* Don't use no double negatives.
* Use the semicolon properly, always use it where it is appropriate; and never where it isn't.
* Reserve the apostrophe for it's proper use and omit it when its not needed.
* Do not put statements in the negative form.
* Verbs has to agree with their subjects.
* No sentence fragments.
* Proofread carefully to see if you any words out.
* Avoid commas, that are not necessary.
* If you reread your work, you will find on rereading that a great deal of repetition can be avoided by rereading and editing.
* A writer must not shift your point of view.
* Eschew dialect, irregardless.
* And don't start a sentence with a conjunction.
* Don't overuse exclamation marks!!!
* Place pronouns as close as possible, especially in long sentences, as of 10 or more words, to their antecedents.
* Writers should always hyphenate between syllables and avoid un-necessary hyph-ens.
* Write all adverbial forms correct.
* Don't use contractions in formal writing.
* Writing carefully, dangling participles must be avoided.
* It is incumbent on us to avoid archaisms.
* If any word is improper at the end of a sentence, a linking verb is.
* Steer clear of incorrect forms of verbs that have snuck in the language.
* Take the bull by the hand and avoid mixed metaphors.
* Avoid trendy locutions that sound flaky.
* Never, ever use repetitive redundancies.
* Everyone should be careful to use a singular pronoun with singular nouns in their writing.
* If I've told you once, I've told you a thousand times, resist hyperbole.
* Also, avoid awkward or affected alliteration.
* Don't string too many prepositional phrases together unless you are walking through the valley of the shadow of death.
* Always pick on the correct idiom.
* "Avoid overuse of 'quotation "marks."'"
* The adverb always follows the verb.
* Last but not least, avoid cliches like the plague; seek viable alternatives."
(New York Times, November 4, 1979; later also published in book form)
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William Safire (Fumblerules: A Lighthearted Guide to Grammar and Good Usage)
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Donβt cross out. (That is editing as you write. Even if you write something you didnβt mean to write, leave it.) Donβt worry about spelling, punctuation, grammar. (Donβt even care about staying within the margins and lines on the page.) Lose control. Donβt think. Donβt get logical. Go for the jugular. (If something comes up in your writing that is scary or naked, dive right into it. It probably has lots of energy.)
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Natalie Goldberg (Writing Down the Bones: Freeing the Writer Within)
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Copies have been dethroned; the economic model built on them is collapsing. In a regime of superabundant free copies, copies are no longer the basis of wealth. Now relationships, links, connections, and sharing are. Value has shifted away from a copy toward the many ways to recall, annotate, personalize, edit, authenticate, display, mark, transfer, and engage a work. Art is a conversation, not a patent office. The citation of sources belongs to the realms of journalism and scholarship, not art. Reality canβt be copyrighted.
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David Shields (Reality Hunger: A Manifesto)
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In a small company, the CTO, R&D, the COO, and even the CEO or cofounders or owners can be responsible for reviewing documentation. Donβt rely on your memory; write it down. Ideas become reality when we speak them and write them. So document them in an idea journal (digital or traditional) without judgment at the time. Inventors (and especially software developers) tend to edit or judge ideas and conclude they are not patentable because they were simpleβeven though they solve important problems and do not exist elsewhere.
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JiNan George (The IP Miracle: How to Transform Ideas into Assets that Multiply Your Business)
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If you are nervous about making the jump or simply putting it off out of fear of the unknown, here is your antidote. Write down your answers to these questions, and keep in mind that thinking a lot will not prove as fruitful or as prolific as simply brain vomiting on the page. Write and do not edit - aim for volume. Spend a few minutes on each answer.
1. Define your nightmare, the absolute worst that could happen if you did what you are considering.
2. What steps could you take to repair the damage or get things back on the upswing, even if temporarily?
3. What are the outcomes or benefits, both temporary and permanent, of more probably scenarios?
4. If you were fired from your job today, what would you do to get things under financial control?
5. What are you putting off out of fear?
6. What is it costing you - financially, emotionally, and physically - to postpone action?
7. What are you waiting for?
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Timothy Ferriss (The 4-Hour Workweek)
β
It is dangerous to leave written that which is badly written.
A chance word, upon paper, may destroy the world. Watch carefully and erase, while the power is still yours, I say to myself, for all that is put down, once it escapes, may rot its way into a thousand minds, the corn become a black smut, and all libraries, of necessity, be burned to the ground as a consequence.
Only one answer: write carelessly so that nothing that is not green will survive.
β William Carlos Williams, Paterson. (New Directions; Revised Edition edition April 17, 1995) Originally published 1946.
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William Carlos Williams (Paterson)
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Anyone and everyone taking a writing class knows that the secret of good writing is to cut it back, pare it down, winnow, chop, hack, prune, and trim, remove every superfluous word, compress, compress, compress...
Actually, when you think about it, not many novels in the Spare tradition are terribly cheerful. Jokes you can usually pluck out whole, by the roots, so if you're doing some heavy-duty prose-weeding, they're the first to go. And there's some stuff about the whole winnowing process I just don't get. Why does it always stop when the work in question has been reduced to sixty or seventy thousand words--entirely coincidentally, I'm sure, the minimum length for a publishable novel? I'm sure you could get it down to twenty or thirty if you tried hard enough. In fact, why stop at twenty or thirty? Why write at all? Why not just jot the plot and a couple of themes down on the back of an envelope and leave it at that? The truth is, there's nothing very utilitarian about fiction or its creation, and I suspect that people are desperate to make it sound manly, back-breaking labor because it's such a wussy thing to do in the first place. The obsession with austerity is an attempt to compensate, to make writing resemble a real job, like farming, or logging. (It's also why people who work in advertising put in twenty-hour days.) Go on, young writers--treat yourself to a joke, or an adverb! Spoil yourself! Readers won't mind!
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Nick Hornby (The Polysyllabic Spree)
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Books are portals for the imagination, whether one is reading or writing, and unless one is keeping a private journal, writing something that no one is likely to read is like trying to have a conversation when youβre all alone. Readers extend and enhance the writerβs created work, and they deepen the colors of it with their own imagination and life experiences. In a sense, thereβs a revision every time one's words are read by someone else, just as surely as there is whenever the writer edits. Nothing is finished or completely dead until both sides quit and itβs no longer a part of anyoneβs thoughts. So it seems almost natural that a lifelong avid reader occasionally wants to construct a mindscape from scratch after wandering happily in those constructed by others. If writing is a collaborative communication between author and reader, then surely thereβs a time and a place other than writing reviews for readers to 'speak' in the human literary conversation.
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P.J. O'Brien
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Dear Aspiring Writer, you are not ready. Stop. Put that finished story away and start another one. In a month, go back and look at the first story. RE-EDIT it. Then send it to a person you respect in the field who will be hard on you. Pray for many many many red marks. Fix them. Then put it away for two weeks. Work on something else. Finally, edit one last time. Now you are ready to sub your first work.
Criticism is hard to take at first. Trust me, I've been there. But learn to think of crit marks as a knife. Each one is designed to cut away the bad and leave a scar. Scars prove you've lived, learned and walked away a winner. Any writer who tells you they don't need edits is lying. I don't care if they have 100 books out. Edits make you grow and if you aren't growing as a writer, you are dead.
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Inez Kelley
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If I walked down by different streets to the Jardin du Luxembourg in the afternoon I could walk through the gardens and then go to the MusΓ©e du Luxembourg where the great paintings were that have now mostly been transferred to the Louvre and the Jeu de Paume. I went there nearly every day for the CΓ©zannes and to see the Manets and the Monets and the other Impressionists that I had first come to know about in the Art Institute at Chicago. I was learning something from the painting of CΓ©zanne that made writing simple true sentences far from enough to make the stories have the dimensions that I was trying to put in them. I was learning very much from him but I was not articulate enough to explain it to anyone. Besides it was a secret. But if the light was gone in the Luxembourg I would walk up through the gardens and stop in at the studio apartment where Gertrude Stein lived at 27 rue de Fleurus.
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Ernest Hemingway (A Moveable Feast: The Restored Edition)
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Learn to enjoy this tidying process. I don't like to write; I like to have written. But I love to rewrite. I especially like to cut: to press the DELETE key and see an unnecessary word or phrase or sentence vanish into the electricity. I like to replace a humdrum word with one that has more precision or color. I like to strengthen the transition between one sentence and another. I like to rephrase a drab sentence to give it a more pleasing rhythm or a more graceful musical line. With every small refinement I feel that I'm coming nearer to where I would like to arrive, and when I finally get there I know it was the rewriting, not the writing, that wont the game.
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William Zinsser (On Writing Well: The Classic Guide to Writing Nonfiction)
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Some years ago I had a conversation with a man who thought that writing and editing fantasy books was a rather frivolous job for a grown woman like me. He wasnβt trying to be contentious, but he himself was a probation officer, working with troubled kids from the Indian reservation where heβd been raised. Day in, day out, he dealt in a concrete way with very concrete problems, well aware that his words and deeds could change young lives for good or ill.
I argued that certain stories are also capable of changing lives, addressing some of the same problems and issues he confronted in his daily work: problems of poverty, violence, and alienation, issues of culture, race, gender, and class...
βStories arenβt real,β he told me shortly. βThey donβt feed a kid left home in an empty house. Or keep an abusive relative at bay. Or prevent an unloved child from finding βfamilyβ in the nearest gang.β
Sometimes they do, I tried to argue. The right stories, read at the right time, can be as important as shelter or food. They can help us to escape calamity, and heal us in its aftermath. He frowned, dismissing this foolishness, but his wife was more conciliatory. βWrite down the names of some books,β she said. βMaybe weβll read them.β
I wrote some titles on a scrap of paper, and the top three were by Charles de lint β for these are precisely the kind of tales that Charles tells better than anyone. The vital, necessary stories. The ones that can change and heal young lives. Stories that use the power of myth to speak truth to the human heart.
Charles de Lint creates a magical world thatβs not off in a distant Neverland but here and now and accessible, formed by the βmagicβ of friendship, art, community, and social activism. Although most of his books have not been published specifically for adolescents and young adults, nonetheless young readers find them and embrace them with particular passion. Iβve long lost count of the number of times Iβve heard people from troubled backgrounds say that books by Charles saved them in their youth, and kept them going.
Recently I saw that parole officer again, and I asked after his work. βGets harder every year,β he said. βOr maybe Iβm just getting old.β He stopped me as I turned to go. βThat writer? That Charles de Lint? My wife got me to read them booksβ¦. Sometimes I pass them to the kids.β
βDo they like them?β I asked him curiously.
βIf I can get them to read, they do. I tell them: Stories are important.β
And then he looked at me and smiled.
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Terri Windling
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The cases described in this section (The Fear of Being) may seem extreme, but I have become convinced that they are not as uncommon as one would think. Beneath the seemingly rational exterior of our lives is a fear of insanity. We dare not question the values by which we live or rebel against the roles we play for fear of putting our sanity into doubt. We are like the inmates of a mental institution who must accept its inhumanity and insensitivity as caring and knowledgeableness if they hope to be regarded as sane enough to leave. The question who is sane and who is crazy was the theme of the novel One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest. The question, what is sanity? was clearly asked in the play Equus.
The idea that much of what we do is insane and that if we want to be sane, we must let ourselves go crazy has been strongly advanced by R.D. Laing. In the preface to the Pelican edition of his book The Divided Self, Laing writes: "In the context of our present pervasive madness that we call normality, sanity, freedom, all of our frames of reference are ambiguous and equivocal." And in the same preface: "Thus I would wish to emphasize that our 'normal' 'adjusted' state is too often the abdication of ecstasy, the betrayal of our true potentialities; that many of us are only too successful in acquiring a false self to adapt to false realities."
Wilhelm Reich had a somewhat similar view of present-day human behavior. Thus Reich says, "Homo normalis blocks off entirely the perception of basic orgonotic functioning by means of rigid armoring; in the schizophrenic, on the other hand, the armoring practically breaks down and thus the biosystem is flooded with deep experiences from the biophysical core with which it cannot cope." The "deep experiences" to which Reich refers are the pleasurable streaming sensations associated with intense excitation that is mainly sexual in nature. The schizophrenic cannot cope with these sensations because his body is too contracted to tolerate the charge. Unable to "block" the excitation or reduce it as a neurotic can, and unable to "stand" the charge, the schizophrenic is literally "driven crazy."
But the neurotic does not escape so easily either. He avoids insanity by blocking the excitation, that is, by reducing it to a point where there is no danger of explosion, or bursting. In effect the neurotic undergoes a psychological castration. However, the potential for explosive release is still present in his body, although it is rigidly guarded as if it were a bomb. The neurotic is on guard against himself, terrified to let go of his defenses and allow his feelings free expression. Having become, as Reich calls him, "homo normalis," having bartered his freedom and ecstasy for the security of being "well adjusted," he sees the alternative as "crazy." And in a sense he is right. Without going "crazy," without becoming "mad," so mad that he could kill, it is impossible to give up the defenses that protect him in the same way that a mental institution protects its inmates from self-destruction and the destruction of others.
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Alexander Lowen (Fear Of Life)
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Of course I know what she means. To make art in fandom is to follow your passion at the risk of never being taken seriously. I've written dozens of fics-put them together and you'd have several novels-but who knows what a college admissions officer will think of that as a pastime. Where does 12,000 Tumbler followers rate in relation to a spot in the National Honor Society in their minds? Every week I get anonymous messages in my inbox telling me I should write a real book. Well, haven't I already? What makes what I do different from "real writing"? Is it that I don't use original characters? I guess that makes every Hardy Boys edition, every Star Wars book, every spinoff, sequel, fairy-tale re-telling, historical romance, comic book reboot, and the music Hamilton "not real writing". Or is it that a real book is something printed, that you can hold in your hand, not something you write on the internet? Or is "real writing" something you sell in a store, not give away for free? No, I know it's none of these things. It's merely this: "real writing" is done by serious people, whereas fanfiction is written by weirdos, teenagers, degenerates, and women.
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Britta Lundin (Ship It)
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Write poorly.
Suck
Write
awful
Terribly
Frightfully
Don't
care
Turn off the inner editor
Let yourself
write
Let it
flow
Let yourself
fail
Do something
crazy
Write fifty thousand words in the month of
November.
I did it.
It was
fun
, it was
insane
, it was
one thousand six
hundred and sixty-seven words a day.
It was
possible.
But you have to turn off your inner critic.
Off completely.
Just
write.
Quickly.
In
bursts.
With
joy.
If you can't write, run away for a few.
Come
back.
Write
again.
Writing is like anything else.
You won't get good at it immediately.
It's a craft, you have to keep getting better.
You don't get to Juilliard unless you practice.
If you want to get to Carnegie Hall,
practice, practice, practice.
...Or give them a lot of money.
Like anything else, it takes ten thousand hours to master.
Just like Malcolm Gladwell says.
So
write.
Fail.
Get your
thoughts
down.
Let it
rest.
Let it
marinate.
Then
edit.
But don't edit as you type,
that just slows the brain down.
Find a daily practice,
for me it's blogging every day.
And it's
fun.
The
more
you write, the
easier
it gets. The more it is a
flow,
the less a
worry.
It's not for
school,
it's not for a
grade,
it's just to get your thoughts
out there.
You
know
they want to come
out.
So
keep at it.
Make it a practice. And write
poorly,
write
awfully,
write with
abandon
and it may end up being
really
really
good.
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Colleen Hoover (Point of Retreat (Slammed, #2))
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Well I want something to do, to create, to achieve, to whatever.... Something I canβt get enough of. You know something that I can't wait to get up in the morning to do something I can't get enough of, something that brings me joy and makes my heart sing. It could be anything, could be more than one thing but something that grabs me. Even a job, if it grabs me so that I could hardly wait to get there. Something that makes me feel good, allows me to be me, gives me freedom to grow and expand, something that grasps my heart, my joy, my excitement and leads me down the path to more joyful things, exciting challenges and challenging things.
Barely stopping to take a breath I continued. Need a new journey a new destination, I want to grow to be or become, tread a new path, see what I haven't seen be what I haven't been ask what I haven't asked dare to what I haven't dared to . . .
I don't even think it is so much a physical thing or mental it's just sort of un-learning some of what I learned Itβs being happy, while I am happy but I want something to do that creates even more. (..)
Doing it for the joy of doing it not for any other reason; also I want it from and un-edited creativity free flowing somethingβ¦ I have some things that seem very interesting and somehow just donβt feel right almost like Iβm taking the wrong path and yet there are other things that I could be doing like writing but it seems that it does not feel good to sit and write but yet some part of me seems to love it and something in me hates it sort of like it could be the thing for me to do and yet it might not be.
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Klaus J. Joehle (A Weekend With 'a' Drunken Leprechaun: "Finding Your Joy")