THE Group for Authors! discussion
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Why do we write?


Jim Gilliam

I don't do remakes. If I write something, it has never been written before. My end of the world is better than the rest.

Again I agree. Everything that I write must not be something that has been written before. I just hate Hollywood for bringing back the past. We as writers must make them look for new material to put on film. We can only do that by writing new material. If we choose old winners such as the end of the world then so be it. We must speak to the new generation which seems to be TV addicts.

Peter. I think you got the point. It doesn't matter what has been written so far, it is what is to be written.

OMG, you just proved I'm getting old. I'd completely forgotten about that one. Thanks! Great book.

I am in Australia. A best seller here is anything over 2,000 books sold (depending on who you talk to) but it's still a struggle to achieve 'double figures' !
The reviewers you mentioned are unknown to me but I am listed in Barnes & Noble (Reluctant Hero by John Hickman)


I developed a passion for writing when I found I couldn't play golf. It intensified when I tried 'smelling the flowers' - and they all smelled the same.
My wife of 45 years said I needed an interest between rising in the mornings and drinking alcohol - so I persevered. She says at my age I should be a mature writer, how about you?

I love that Karen, well said.

I developed a passion for writing whe..."
Nice. I hope you have gotten a better relationship with your wife. writing what you feel could be the way to tell the world how you feel.

I don't know your age? I'm an old fart, but I've learned that writing what you truly feel, like always telling people the truth, might upset more people than you please. Maybe that's why politicians keep on keeping on? Because they don't tell the truth!


I am in Australia. A best seller here is anything over 2,000 books sold (depending on who you talk to) but it's still a struggle to achieve 'dou..."
Very interesting John. I wonder what the number is for a NY Times bestseller? I don't know what the numbers are for a bestseller in Canada. I have a new book, Shame: Conception, coming out this month so I will have to ask.


Thank you Karen. Sorry I haven't found out the numbers for Canada yet.

Even if my novels don't sell well, I'll never quit. Writing is such a big part of who I am that I don't think I could stop. I plan to keep attending workshops and taking classes so I continue to improve though. Hopefully that will help my odds! :)

I love that you wrote about your dad's experience John. What a fantastic way to remember someone. I write young adult fantasy.

Unfortunately, that's accurate. It takes a lot of the prestige out of being a NY Times bestseller since it really isn't about sales at all. Though hopefully if the stores order in so many copies, they'll sell a bunch of them!


For me it was a passion I had as a kid, but lost the drive until about ten years ago (in my mid-thirties). I'm so glad I rediscovered it.
I've always loved to communicate ideas and stories, but most of all I like to (hopefully) entertain an audience/readership. In another life I studied acting and our major rule was 'you are there for the audience, the audience isn't there for you'.
I guess that's what I like about the rediscovery of writing. It's easier to get ideas across than other artistic hobbies I have, and I love to (again, hopefully) put a smile on the face of someone who has read my work.

Charles wrote: "Why do we write? Are we egomaniacs? I think not. I write because I can. I have new ideas that have never been published before. Let us write because there are voices to be heard. Join in please."
I write for many different reasons. I'd like to believe that the sole reason is that I absolutely love to do it, but not always. Sometimes it can be a drag, just like anything else, though when I write I feel like I am in complete control of my craft and that until I submit my work somewhere nobody can tell me what I can or cannot do. I'm a big believer in free will, and with writing there are no limits to that... like I said, until you try to actually make money off of it.
Which brings me to the next reason why I like to write: I've grown up being told to be careful in choosing your career because you should truly enjoy what you want to do, which is true to a certain extent. Maybe today not so much, with people scrounging for entry-level positions at their local Meijer just to pay their smart phone bill(s). Knowing that I have a unique talent and voice in my writing, and that I can make money off of it, drives me to push harder in my craft, to master it, even temporarily, so that I can leave a legacy.
Which is my third reason. Every human being searches for something to leave their legacy, whether their genes live on through their children, through the buildings they design, the cases they won, etc. With writing, you are given the utmost opportunity to leave a legacy with your words that generations to come may appreciate and use constructively to shape their lives. That is, unless there's some type of Farenheit 451 scenario going to happen in the near future.
Writers encompass everything in this world, they are maestros leading their orchestra, they are engineers and architects designing a piece so it doesn't cave in on itself. Writers speak for humanity, plead cases, support causes, what have you. Where would we be without writers?
Garrett Dennert
I write for many different reasons. I'd like to believe that the sole reason is that I absolutely love to do it, but not always. Sometimes it can be a drag, just like anything else, though when I write I feel like I am in complete control of my craft and that until I submit my work somewhere nobody can tell me what I can or cannot do. I'm a big believer in free will, and with writing there are no limits to that... like I said, until you try to actually make money off of it.
Which brings me to the next reason why I like to write: I've grown up being told to be careful in choosing your career because you should truly enjoy what you want to do, which is true to a certain extent. Maybe today not so much, with people scrounging for entry-level positions at their local Meijer just to pay their smart phone bill(s). Knowing that I have a unique talent and voice in my writing, and that I can make money off of it, drives me to push harder in my craft, to master it, even temporarily, so that I can leave a legacy.
Which is my third reason. Every human being searches for something to leave their legacy, whether their genes live on through their children, through the buildings they design, the cases they won, etc. With writing, you are given the utmost opportunity to leave a legacy with your words that generations to come may appreciate and use constructively to shape their lives. That is, unless there's some type of Farenheit 451 scenario going to happen in the near future.
Writers encompass everything in this world, they are maestros leading their orchestra, they are engineers and architects designing a piece so it doesn't cave in on itself. Writers speak for humanity, plead cases, support causes, what have you. Where would we be without writers?
Garrett Dennert

If you lived 'down-under' I'd suggest you've been watching too many 6 O'Clock News shows. If you follow the Global Crisis in the USA then it's obvious the end of the world is a futuristic horror story! And not far off! (Only joking!)
Tell us more about your book, please?
Best, John



Writing became an addiction, part of my psyche--a way to tap into what I'm thinking, my view of the world, a way to express my thoughts coherently and/or symbolically. I started my first journal at 14 and have kept one ever since. I return to it when I'm writing a YA novel or when I want to recall what it felt like to be in love or pregnant or heartbroken for the first time.
Writing allows me to sound much more organized and intelligent than I ever could speaking off the cuff.
I discovered early that my characters could also speak for me and could always come up with the clever retort that I would have thought of days or weeks later.
For most of my writing life I wrote after hours or as part of my job--as a mentor for YAWT (Young Artists Workshop Theater) I always produced one of my own plays along with the young writers works to encourage and inspire them. I wrote for young readers at Scholastic. My short stories have been published in various literary magazines, but I wrote my first mystery CRIMSON ICE in response to a challenge from my sister. It was accepted for publication but then the publisher went bankrupt. I decided to reclaim it and publish it myself through Lulu and promote it on Amazon. Just now expanded to a Kindle edition. Of course I'd like to sell a million copies, but to be honest, it makes me happy just to hear that someone read it and enjoyed it. A mystery book club chose it and wrote me fan letters--my first ever-- and I was thrilled. I often give away copies to people I meet, hoping they'll enjoy it and spread the word, and I set my Kindle price low and even allow lending because I'd rather have it out there.
Getting an agent is a catch-22 for sure, but a good agent does much more than collect $$. She can be an advisor, a mentor, a critic, an advocate. My agent has assured me that when she loves a book she never gives up on it. I'm hoping it won't be long before my first YA is out there.

For me, I like to write as it is an opportunity to create fictional worlds, and, be able to tell the stories that I want to tell, and, hopefully, which readers will find interesting.
I believe we writers are all seeking different truths, and, through our writing, wish to create more open discussion about the themes and topics which we are pursuing.
I believe that, in many instances, we seek to make a better, fairer world with our viewpoints, which are expressed through our writing.
I also believe for many writers that there may be a dissatisfaction with life itself, and writing is a way of "improving" upon life, albeit with our own individual stamps.

I do the same thing...I keep pen and paper close by... then enter them into the laptop in the morning with dream dates


Fiction allows me to satirize the absurd, to make the unreal (and often surreal) real, and even get in that really good line I wished I'd thought of in live conversations.




I wish I'd started writing fiction when I was younger. I kept diaries and was a prolific letter writer and wrote essays and creative non-fiction (and was a lawyer). It was probably a good background in some ways, but I had a lot to learn about developing a plot, and that has taken a few years.
If you have a natural talent you should develop it.Good luck on your writing career!

I guess the simple answer is: Because I had to. What changed recently was making that writing good enough to try to share with others and getting the editorial help I needed to be unashamed of the result.
I'm having fun Dan, but only now and then. Mostly it's torture. The self-selling that is.
Regards to all: David Rory.
I'm having fun Dan, but only now and then. Mostly it's torture. The self-selling that is.
Regards to all: David Rory.





In answer to the topic question, I could not have said it better myself.
But this: Ali wrote: "To write a book is easy; it only requires pen and ink and the ever patient paper. To read a book is more difficult, because of the tendency to go to sleep...but the most difficult task of all that ..." is the most profound comment yet.
And @Peter. Thanks for the laugh!
Sharon