Between Books

Writers sometimes ask me, “What should I do between books?”


Stephen King writes every day, including his birthday and Christmas


My answer:


There should never be a “between books.”


Don’t stop.


Don’t blow your momentum.


Myself, I want to be ninety pages into the next book before I finish the one I’m working on now. My aim is to move seamlessly from one to the other. If I knock off Book #13 on Tuesday, I’m deep into the trenches on #14 Wednesday.


Why?


Resistance.


Resistance loves it when we stop working.


I have a friend at the gym who used to hang out with Jack Lalanne. He said Jack had a rule.


It’s okay if you skip a day working out. But on that day you’re not allowed to eat.


Jack had another axiom:


Every day you skip takes six days to make up.


Can that be true? I have no idea. But I know every day of writing we miss makes it that much harder when we come back.


Bail on three days and our writing muscles start going soft.


Skip a week and we’re falling behind the eight-ball.


Miss a month and it’s like starting over from scratch.


Stephen King writes three-sixty-five, including Christmas and his birthday.


Don’t stop.


There should be no “between books.”

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Published on March 11, 2020 01:18
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message 1: by Aleks (last edited Mar 12, 2020 07:56PM) (new)

Aleks Canard It's cool to see you bring up Stephen King in regards to writing every day. Years ago I heard him say that his daily quota was three thousand words, so I made that my quota as well. It's amazing what you can accomplish when you write that much.


message 2: by Greg (new)

Greg Correll I needed this today. Thanks, Steven.


message 3: by carmelia (new)

carmelia Steven... You are my inspiration as always. Your two books--"The War of Art" and "Do the Work" are my Writing Bibles.
You rock!!!


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