One of the most honestly written books on writing that I’ve read. Writers on Writing discusses, in essay form, creating a daily routine, the real difference between writing and thinking about writing, and the importance of consistency.
Those of us who are in it really appreciate the camaraderie that is found in the writing community on social media. It can be a lonely career, with hours upon hours spent alone, at a desk, with a cold coffee, developing a skin, as your only companion. But there are moments, just moments, when someone else has massive success, usually it’s thoroughly deserved. But sometimes…
“Like every other category of human, writers are an envious lot. There’s always somebody out there enjoying the success we want. Flaunting it by their mere existence, the swine: sales figures, audience size, skill level, story acceptances, film rights, book contracts, glowing reviews. Name it, and somebody out there has more of it than we have and Oh my God they don’t deserve it, not like I do, I hate them, we hates them all, we swears it on the precious.
“People achieve what they achieve. They reap what they reap. Merit may not always have much to do with it, and nobody’s going to check it for your approval. You can either live with that, or let it eat you alive.”
15% in, Part Five of Eleven Sign Posts for Going All The Way by Brian Hodge, Writers On Writing
The general idea here is to get your head down, concentrate on your own WIP and stop worrying about what everyone else is doing. Be consistent. Don’t make excuses. Give the book the time it needs, and be kind to your editor. They’re people, too, and they don’t want to add in all your apostrophes for you.