anthimeria: unicorn rampant, first line of Kipling's "The Thousandth Man" (Default)
Lauren K. Moody ([personal profile] anthimeria) wrote2010-12-09 08:39 pm

Sharing: How to be a Writer, by Elena Gleason

A friend of mine who also has an infrequently-updated but always entertaining blog (link off to the right on my sidebar) has just posted a really neat entry about advice on how to be a writer and when NOT to take it.

Check it out.

I do think that one of the things writing "rules" tend not to mention is that there's a good chance few if any of those rules will apply to everyone.  I know I have my own process that took me years to work out, and in many ways I'm still figuring it out (and I have a degree in writing).  What Elena has to say is smart and down-to-earth, and I agree with her--even if the very thought of trying to write the way she does makes me twitch.  My process is very different than hers, but we're both still writers.

feuervogel: photo of the statue of Victory and her chariot on the Brandenburg Gate (Default)

[personal profile] feuervogel 2010-12-11 09:24 pm (UTC)(link)
And the corollary: don't be afraid to try doing it a different way to see if there's a way that works better.

I'm enamoured of the idea of an actual outline after the trouble with my WIP, but I have no idea if I can actually write from an outline that's more detailed than "ok, there are these people X, Y, Z, and they have to A. It starts out here, these are some points I want to hit on the way, and this is how it ends. And here are some of the motivations and double-crosses." I'm willing to give it a try, because there's a chance it's less painful than discovering partway through that there's a huge plot hole you don't know how to fill.