I Don’t Know Writing, But I Know What I Like…

I can’t remember where it was suggested or by whom, but someone recently asked me to write a blog post on craft. How I write. How I plot. How I come up with my characters and my stories.


I dutifully sat down to write a blog post on my process — and then I realized that I have absolutely no clue how I do these things. To be honest, I don’t think I’m all that good at the business of writing. You should see how brutally painful the process is for me. My rough drafts go from unreadable notes and musings into something with a semblance of story, but it doesn’t happen easily. It isn’t pretty.


I just finished a science fiction work from a debut author. It isn’t out yet (they wanted me to blurb it), and all I could think was how far superior this writer is. I marvel at his ability to turn a phrase, the character development, the plot, the pacing. It’s brilliant. How does anyone do this? How do I do this?


After watching myself write the last few days with this question in the back of my mind, I now have an idea of what makes me a decent writer. It’s a combination of being a practiced reader and a persistant motherfucker.


Reading is the best lesson on writing. It’s like listening to music over and over again until you learn how a good song is supposed to sound. I think I “write by reading” the way some people can “play by ear.” When I’m writing a rough draft, I can tell that my words suck. It’s painfully obvious. When I go back to revise, I take those sucky words and I keep rearranging them until they stop sucking. Eventually, the words flow and convey meaning in a manner that I’m tolerant of. With the next pass, more of these spots are sanded down until they don’t trip me up. Enough passes like this, and my stories start to read about as decently as anyone else’s. I just stick with it until I don’t hate it. I bang on the keys until a tune pops out.


Learning to be this persistant was difficult. For two decades, I started stories only to abandon them. I never put enough work into them to love them, and thereby to love the process of writing. It wasn’t until I received feedback for some lengthy blog posts and sailing adventures that I felt encouraged to write to completion. After that, I began writing book, film, and product reviews that won a bit of praise. This fed my drive to be more persistant with my novels. I finally tunneled my way through to the end of a manuscript. I cleaned it up until the words stopped stabbing me in my eyeballs. I fell in love with this process.


How do I write? The same way I take pictures (another hobby that people mistakenly think I’m good at). I do a lot of it, and then I delete the bits that suck. I’m a great reader. I’ve been doing it all my life. I know what’s good and what’s bad. I just have to make a lot of the bad in order to get lucky and stumble on some of the good. And then I publish my greatest hits.


My best advice, then, is to write a bunch and write to completion. Start small. Write reviews and post them on Facebook or a blog. Write journal entries about your day or days from your past. Write short stories. Write fan fiction. Stick with it for years. I know that seems like a long time, so I suggest you enjoy the process along the way. Enjoy each piece you finish. Share your work. You’ll get better, believe me. And I think, when the words align just so and you write something with perfect pitch, that you’ll surprise yourself. You’ll see that this is something anyone can do. You just need to get a lot down and know what you like when you see it. Be persistant, motherfuckers.

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Published on February 01, 2013 07:32
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message 1: by Colby (new)

Colby Love it! Gives us REAL amateurs some hope! lol


message 2: by James (new)

James Larranaga Good idea to write to completion. How many half-written best-sellers are sitting in a drawer or hard drive somewhere? Twelve years ago I wrote two novels back to back and published one when it was much harder to self-publish than it is today. Six months ago my wife asked about my other unfinished novel. Where is it? Why don't you publish it? I reread the manuscript not even knowing how it would end....it had been so long since I thought about the story. I hired an editor to shape it and it's at CreateSpace now and it's received some good reviews from Goodbooks Today and Kirkus. (The Goodbooks Today review is on my Goodreads blog.) I plan to release "In the Company of Wolves" September of 2013 after doing pre-publicity and Goodreads giveaways etc.

So it has been a long journey for my second novel but I think subsequent works will flow. Start stories and bring them to completion. Everyone likes a good ending....even the characters in the story want to know how it's going to end.


message 3: by Debbie (new)

Debbie You surprise me every time you write something. I love this post - and laughed, too. You have no idea how inspiring you are to others. Thank you!!


message 4: by Satin (new)

Satin Thank you! I really needed to read this. :D


message 5: by Niels (last edited Feb 05, 2013 11:29AM) (new)

Niels Pedersen I am not, nor have I ever been a persistent motherfucker, I prefer to always do things right the first time, and to make everything I do seem effortless to others, call it a character flaw.
It's not to say I don't have it in me to see things to completion, just the opposite really, I will work myself to exhaustion to finish a job, but maybe it's ingrained in me from the all the years serving in the army and being in the concrete business. I don't have the option very often to go back and fix things, to dabble and tweak, I need to know the endgame at the start and make every step towards that end be a step forward. Nothing stings so much as undoing something you spent precious hours and uncounted effort accomplishing because it was wrong.
Authors tell me that while writing I should just write through the mistakes and typos and go back and fix those little things later. That it is more important to get your ideas down before they disappear. I can't even relate to you how hard that seems to me. If I get a sentence down and don't like it, the compulsion to fix it "right now" is nearly insurmountable. I'm a foundation guy, I build layer by layer, according to a plan. I need to see the whole picture before hand, it just the way I'm wired.
So to know that many of you struggle to write your way through your books, that you agonize over them, and constantly go back and revise them, until you finally abandon them and say "good enough", well I think the Germans would call what I feel hearing that "schadenfreude".
I love what you and others like you do. You give us untold hours of entertainment. I hope you never stop. It's a unique ability.


P.S. I can't believe I had to go back and edit this motherfucker.


message 6: by Colby (new)

Colby haha niels!


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