Ask Barbara Delinsky! discussion
The Writing Process
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In my "juvenile" experience I find that when I write, whether it be fiction for my pleasure or more structured writing for school, I could be almost guaranteed to throw out the first 4-5 pages until my style started to flow. I have also recently read an interview from JK Rowling where she indicated that she had written certain chapters for Harry Potter that she had intended to be for Book 1, then Book 3, but ended up feeling it fit more in Book 5.
Just wondering how things fell into place for you, my favorite writer?



I would love to write but I'm not very good with grammer,spelling.beside going to classes and learning how to write is my only hope? I do love to read and for me reading is like an ecape from my problems! Do you ever write from pieces of your own life? To me books and animals (dogs,birds,tutles)are the greatest things in life! oh and of course love! :) How does one become a good writer?

Yes, my stories are more complex now, for the reasons you mention, as well as the demands of the marketplace. I like to think I grow a little with each book -- stretch myself as a writer. I do love those older books still, but simply feel that my recent work is different.

I would love to write but I'm not very good with grammer,spelling.beside going to classes and learning how to write is my only hope? I do love to read and for me reading is like an..."
Becoming a good writer takes years of work. I'm still at it.
That said, I was kicked out of honors English in high school because I couldn't keep up -- the message in that being if you know the nuts and bolts of creating a sentence, you're on your way. So much of the rest is the heart you put into your book, something that isn't taught in school.
I think that the best preparation for being a writer is reading, which you're already doing!

In my "juvenile" experience I find that when ..."
Wendy, I don't actually take something from one place and put it another, though I may cut a chapter if it doesn't work or reorganize plot happenings. Usually, though, for me at least, that takes rewriting. Each chapter I write is appropriate for the particular time in which it appears in the story. Every sentence, every word fits that time. If the time changes, so do the words.

At what age did you know you wanted to write for a living?
Thanks!

Most of my ideas come from the news. I keep an idea file and add thoughts to it as they happen in the world. When I'm done with one book and ready to start thinking of the next, some of these may be already stale, but others aren't. And then, while I'm trying to decide on a topic, there may be a news story that inspires a whole different, even more current one.
ESCAPE came from my own need for a break after writing NOT MY DAUGHTER.
NOT MY DAUGHTER came from news reports of teen pregnancy, particularly the alleged pregnancy pact at a high school in Gloucester, Massachusetts.
WHILE MY SISTER SLEEPS came from my imagination, as sparked by my envy of runners. I am not one, can't seem to hack it on the road, but I do admire them. Likewise gardening, which I cannot do but which Molly, in that book, does extraordinarily well.
So there's the idea. What comes next? What would you like to know?