Erich w/ an h
asked
David Wong:
A writer's past work has influence on their present and future work, whether through style or content or both. How do you feel your work writing non-fiction has affected your work writing fiction, and vice versa?
David Wong
The answer might be less interesting than what you're expecting, but my non-fiction work comes from my full time day job (I'm the executive editor at Cracked.com, for those who didn't know) and what that taught me was how to deal with deadlines.
I have to turn stuff in every single day at Cracked, failing to do it isn't an option, there's no such thing as going off and spending a day at the lake ruminating on my next article. It's due on this particular day and has to be a this particular length and on this particular subject. If I'm not excited about it, I have to make myself be excited. If I hit a dead end while writing or researching, I have to immediately start over and get something else going. Procrastination isn't an option, getting discouraged isn't an option.
As a result, I've developed a large set of mental tools for overcoming those things and all of that carries over when I'm writing a book on a deadline, even if that deadline is 18 months down the road. I have friends who have been tinkering with a novel for seven years off and on, and that's fine, but I don't have that option. This is my job, I have customers waiting at the counter, I owe them a book and I will do it and I will do it on time and I will do it right. But it was writing as my day job that taught me how to be creative within that mindset.
I have to turn stuff in every single day at Cracked, failing to do it isn't an option, there's no such thing as going off and spending a day at the lake ruminating on my next article. It's due on this particular day and has to be a this particular length and on this particular subject. If I'm not excited about it, I have to make myself be excited. If I hit a dead end while writing or researching, I have to immediately start over and get something else going. Procrastination isn't an option, getting discouraged isn't an option.
As a result, I've developed a large set of mental tools for overcoming those things and all of that carries over when I'm writing a book on a deadline, even if that deadline is 18 months down the road. I have friends who have been tinkering with a novel for seven years off and on, and that's fine, but I don't have that option. This is my job, I have customers waiting at the counter, I owe them a book and I will do it and I will do it on time and I will do it right. But it was writing as my day job that taught me how to be creative within that mindset.
More Answered Questions
Matt Richland
asked
David Wong:
JDATE 3 is the end of your current book deal from what I've read. Do you plan on writing more novels after that? I'm a big fan of your work. Just so you know I'll buy any novel you put out for the rest of my life based on the quality of your first three books. Make more stuff, dude. Please make more stuff.
Trevor Tallmadge
asked
David Wong:
I just finished adapting my book (horror fiction) into a screenplay and still have no agent!! Might you have any recommendations or suggestions on how to find a good and trustworthy literary/movie agent? I live in the Boston area. And, I just have to say that, after I read John Dies, I put it down and said to myself, "Damn! That's the kind of book I wanted to write!!" Great stuff!
David Wong
5,730 followers
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