Writing Advice We Should NEVER Follow!
by Edie Melson @EdieMelson

It doesn’t matter if you’re an established author with thirty-plus books under your belt, or someone working on a first novel.
Announce you’re writing a book, and you’ve opened yourself up for unsolicited advice.
Today, I'm going to share some of the writing advice you should never follow!
2. Write every day. Again, it sounds good. Surely someone who’s serious about something will do it every day. Truthfully, we all work better when we take time to relax and let our minds rest.

4. Write dialogue like you talk. We all want the dialogue we write to read like a real conversation. But the smart writer knows that means taking the boring parts out. Listen to a real conversation or better yet, record one. Then write it out. You’ll see how truly awful it is.
5. Never use clichés. Never is NEVER good advice when it comes to writing. Sure you want to avoid clichés—in narrative. But the fact is, we all use them occasionally. Judiciously sprinkling them throughout dialogue can give your writing a familiar flavor that helps the reader connect with your characters.
6. Never use the verb was, it’s passive. Sometimes the word was is passive, sometimes is just past tense. How to tell? The quickest way is to see if it’s helping another verb, like, She was sleeping. That’s almost always passive. A better option would be, She slept.
7. Always outline before you write. Some people are known as plotters—or those who prefer to outline their story before writing. Others, referred to as pantsers or intuitive writers, like to discover the story as they write. The best way to do it? The way that works for you.

9. Always write in the same place. Most of us need variety, and that includes the place we work. Sometimes I write at my desk, others at the dining room table, and on good days, the screened porch out back.
10. Don’t begin to build a platform until you have a contract. This is the worst advice I’ve ever heard, and there are two major reasons. First, if you wait until you have a contract to build your platform, you’ll probably have a hard time getting said platform. Second, you will be way behind. It takes a good year to a year-and-a-half to build a viable platform.
As you may have noticed, the first clue the advice you’re hearing is suspect are the use of the words ALWAYS and/or NEVER.
Now it’s your turn, what’s the worst writing advice you’ve ever heard?
Don’t forget to join the conversation!
Blessings,Edie
TWEETABLES10 Pieces of #Writing Advice We Should NEVER Follow - @EdieMelson (Click to Tweet)
ALWAYS & NEVER are clues that the #writing advice we're hearing is suspect - @EdieMelson (Click to Tweet)
Published on February 23, 2016 01:00
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