Goodreads
Goodreads asked Michael Vorhis:

What’s your advice for aspiring writers?

Michael Vorhis Advice for aspiring writers? I don't think there is such a thing as an "aspiring writer." There are inexperienced writers, but a writer is a writer by virtue of feeling the need to write. If the need is there, you're already a writer--you were born a writer--and then it's just a matter of letting out what is dying to come out. So grab a pen.

Until the need is there, just accumulate the experiences of life--store them up for when your pen needs them. And whenever the need takes a holiday, give it the holiday it needs.

If you're a writer but you want to polish your ability to communicate emotions and thoughts so that your efforts are effective, read. Not magazines, not pop culture nonsense, but literature. Fiction. Great Masters; adept contemporary authors. Thrilling, riveting, deliciously experiential works. Absorb those good examples of creative thinking and story-weaving and linguistics, and then see how that affects your writing need, and your results.

If random readers (those about which you know nothing) criticize, pay them little mind. Who are they, after all? Have they accomplished anything substantial on paper themselves, other than commenting on (hitch-hiking on) others' original works? Don't worry--everyone knows the difference between the athlete and the nasal voice from the bleachers. Instead of worrying about the reception, have VERY high standards, and ratchet them up ever higher every day of every year, and be true to them. You're the perceptive, discerning reviewer who matters most, particularly at this stage. And it's the body of work you will create that defines your contribution, not any one piece...so don't agonize if this or that work may not have the broadest appeal. Over time you'll encounter your share of intelligent, appreciative readers. Write, and write well, and never mind the reception; it reflects itself far more than it reflects your work.

Feel free to write shorter stories until one of them begs you to do it justice in a ful-length novel...then just flesh in more scenes, out of order if that's how they come to you, and experiment with structure and story pace, and don't be daunted by the magnitude of a full novel project...and one day you'll sit bolt upright to realize you have most of a rough draft.

Then with an eye that's as excited as it is cold, polish and re-work and DO NOT BE IN A HURRY. A masterpiece takes time; work it and let it happen. It will take some years, all told. It's done when it's done.

Then let it simmer for a few weeks, or even much more...and try to self-edit. If whole sections need to be scrapped, that's part of the process, and part of the fun.

At some point you'll feel it's ready. It won't be, quite (you're intent on delivering a truly brilliant work, after all). Very carefully choose a hand-picked group of beta reviewers--people you know who are perceptive, thorough, honest, precise in their ability to communicate, DEVOID OF ENVY, and who care about you. Select people who themselves have dreams, people with the capacity to not only discern, but to appreciate. Try to stick with those who have never been formulized by some creative writing night course or support group--people of each gender who have some life experience under their belts, and who can see multiple shades of grey. Listen to them--mostly, feel their reactions. Re-work the entire thing again, the way YOU would address any problems they "felt." Rejoice in what they loved about it. Employ an editor if they suggest you need one. Care about their perceptions more than their specific fix ideas, because the "how to fix" is your territory. Often a major disconnect can be eliminated with a single word or phrase in one pivotal line of dialog halfway down page 264; you'll know best how to address any issues your team has helped you to see.

Finally, finally...be willing to call it done. The great Leonardo Da Vinci said, "Art is never finished, only abandoned." Of course make sure the cover art is as brilliant as the manuscript itself, and the meta-data (gotta be balanced in so many ways), and all the professionalism with which this work is to be launched. Give it the gift of Dignity; don't be in such a hurry that you make the mistake of sending it out in its pajamas.

But you have to let it fly at some point. When it does, smile. Then get on with the next one, which, if you were born to write, has already occurred to you and has been begging you to start on it! :)

- Michael Vorhis

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