What Reading Teaches You

As a writer, I’ve learned so much from what I’ve read over the years. You take in how stories work by reading loads of them.

I picked up on the Rule of Three from reading the classic fairytales, for example. I came to realise something would happen, then happen again, but on the third time there would be a different outcome.

You also get to see how stories are laid out (paragraphs, dialogue, how scene breaks work etc) just by reading how others have done this before you.

I’ve long thought writers effectively have two great joys here - their own writing and reading. The love of reading triggers the desire to write.

It is also why it pays writers to read widely - classic and contemporary, fiction and non-fiction. Ideas for your own stories are often triggered by something else you’ve read so it pays to have an “imagination pool” to fish from which is as wide and deep as possible. Reading widely, and in varied forms, does that for you.

I’ve found the Kindle has encouraged further reading in that I use it to try out books by authors new to me. I will take a “punt” on a £2.99 ebook. If I like the author’s work, I often go on to buy further paperbacks from them later.

But this is all because the Kindle makes it easy to read even more works. I like that. I make a point of reading both ebooks and paperbacks in my main reading session. Love them all.

Books are wonderful things.
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Published on April 06, 2024 08:52 Tags: am-reading, am-writing, ebooks, fairytales, fiction, non-fiction, paperbacks
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message 1: by Jim (new)

Jim Bates Hi Allison!
Once again you have hit the nail on the head by mirroring my thoughts, this time by talking about the importance of reading widely. I'm trying to do more of that these days - not just literary fiction. Right now I'm reading "Humankind" by Rutger Bregaman. It's fascinating!
Take care, and thank you for blogging!!
Jim


message 2: by Allison (new)

Allison Symes Many thanks, Jim. I'm currently reading Double Cross by Ben Macintyre which tells the true story of the D Day double agents used to fool Hitler. I've recently read The Princes in the Tower (non-fiction) by Philippa Langley and that sheds a lot more new light on what happened to those lads. Let's just say, don't take Shakespeare as gospel so to speak when it comes to his play Richard III. The Bard has got it wrong! Still an incredible writer, mind you.


message 3: by Jim (new)

Jim Bates Hi Allison. Thank you for sharing your insights! Have a great rest of your week :)


message 4: by Allison (new)

Allison Symes Thanks, Jim. You too.


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