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Showing newest posts with label Write (in English). Show older posts
Showing newest posts with label Write (in English). Show older posts

05 May 2009

VISION AND REVISION

VISION AND REVISION
Writing On Writing Well and keeping it up-to-date for 35 years
By William Zinsser

“You should write a book about how to write,” my wife said in June of 1974 when I was complaining to her, as I often did, that I had run out of things to write about. At that time our family lived at Yale, where I taught writing and was master of Branford College. When the academic year ended, we would move to our summer house in Niantic, Connecticut, and there I would hole up for three months doing writing projects of my own. I worked in a shed (below) at the rear of the property, next to some woods, my Underwood typewriter perched on a green metal typing table under a light bulb suspended from the ceiling.

Caroline’s suggestion came from out of nowhere—I had never thought of writing a textbook—but it felt right. I had then been teaching my course at Yale for four years, and I liked the idea of trying to capture it in a book. Many questions, however, occurred to me. Who would I be writing for? What tone should I adopt? How would my book differ from all the other books on writing?

The dominant manual at that time was The Elements of Style, by E. B. White and William Strunk Jr., which was E. B. White’s updating of the guide that had most influenced him, written in 1918 by his English professor at Cornell. My problem was that White was the writer who had most influenced me. His was the style—seemingly casual but urbane and wise—that I had long taken as my own model. How could I not agree with everything he said about language and usage in The Elements of Style? He was Goliath standing in my path.

But when I analyzed White’s book, its terrors evaporated. The Elements of Style was essentially a book of pointers and admonitions: Do this, don’t do that. As principles they were invaluable, but they were only principles, existing without context or reality. What his book didn’t teach was how to apply those principles to the various forms that nonfiction writing can take, each with its special requirements: travel writing, science writing, business writing, the interview, memoir, sports, criticism, humor. That’s what I taught in my course, and it’s what I would teach in my book. I wouldn’t compete with The Elements of Style; I would complement it.

That decision gave me my pedagogical structure. It also finally liberated me from E. B. White. I saw that I was long overdue to stop trying to write like E. B. White—and trying to be E. B. White, the sage essayist. He and I, after all, weren’t really much alike. He was a passive observer of events, withdrawn from the tumult, his world bounded by his office at The New Yorker and his house in rural Maine. I was a participant, a seeker of people and far places, change and risk. At Yale I had also become a teacher, my world enlarged by every new student who came along. The personal voice of the teacher, not the literary voice of the essayist, was the one I wanted narrating my book.

For that I would need a new model—a writer I would emulate not for his subject but for his turn of mind, his enjoyment of what he was teaching. That book wouldn’t come from a professor of English, squeezing the language dry with rules of rhetoric. It would have to come from an entirely different field, and it did. My model for On Writing Well was American Popular Song: The Great Innovators, 1900–1950, by the composer Alec Wilder.

Wilder’s book was one I had been waiting for all my life, the bible that every collector hopes someone will write in the field of his addiction. I was a collector of songs—the thousands of Broadway show tunes, Hollywood movie songs, and popular standards written in the 40-year golden age from Show Boat in 1926 to the rise of rock in the mid-1960s. As a part-time club pianist, I thought I knew them well—the oldest of old friends. Wilder showed me that I didn’t.

To write his book, Wilder examined the sheet music of 17,000 songs, selecting 300 in which he felt that the composer had pushed the form into new territory. Along with his text, he provided the pertinent bars of music to illustrate a passage that he found original or somehow touching. But what I loved most about Wilder’s book went beyond his erudition. It was his total commitment to his enthusiasms, as if he were saying: “These are just one man’s opinions—take ’em or leave ’em.” His pleasure was to praise. That connected with my own principle of not teaching by bad example. I may cite some horrible example of jargon or pomposity to warn against the prevailing bloatage, but I don’t deal in junk. Writing is learned by imitation, and I want my students to imitate the best.

Thus I saw from Wilder’s American Popular Song that I might write a book about writing that would be just one man’s book. I would write from my own convictions—take ’em or leave ’em—and I would illustrate my points with passages by writers I admired. I would treat the English language spaciously, as a gift waiting for anyone to unwrap, not as a narrow universe of grammar and syntax. Above all, I would try to enjoy the trip and to convey that enjoyment to my readers.

I didn’t look at any other books on writing. I just sat down and wrote my own book. I wrote in the first person, starting with the very first sentence—highly untextbook-like behavior—and quickly found myself addressing the reader directly (“you’ll find,” “always remember,” “try not to”). It was a teacher’s style, not a writer’s style, and I fell into it naturally, working from the notes I had used in class.

I began by writing brief chapters on fundamental principles, such as clarity, simplicity, brevity, usage, voice, and the elimination of clutter. Then I settled into the heart of the book—longer chapters explaining how to write a lead, how to write an ending, how to conduct and construct an interview, how to write about travel and technology and sports, and and how to write other forms of nonfiction. Throughout, I supplied examples of writing I admired. My authors were widely different in personality and style, but they all wrote well. That was the premise I wanted to establish: that nonfiction is hospitable to an infinite number of voices if the writing is good.

My only concern was that I would go broke paying for permission to reprint all those excerpts. But then I consulted the “fair use” provision of the copyright law and found that an excerpt of 300 words or less—in a book-length work—could be used without payment. That rule was not only a financial lifesaver; it was the breakthrough that gave the book its pace. As an editor I knew that almost anything can be cut to 300 words; the material is somewhere in the marble, waiting to be quarried out. Therefore I selected passages that made a coherent point in less than 300 words and also preserved the author’s style and personality. Only in a few cases, when the writer needed an amplitude I didn’t want to violate, did I let an excerpt run longer. That 300-word limit saved the book from looking and feeling like an anthology of required readings. It was my book; I was the tour guide.

At that time nonfiction was still a man’s world; women mainly plied the quieter waters of invented truth—novels and short stories. But the feminist movement had begun to empower women to believe in their own reality, and they had begun to create a bold new literature of memoir, biography, and social and political concern. Only one woman, however, had grabbed my attention as an important long-form journalist: Joan Didion. Her newly published book of collected magazine pieces, Slouching Toward Bethlehem, was just the kind of writing I was trying to teach—personal, observant, engaged—and it had worked well for my Yale students. Now, in my book, I used several of her strong passages.

But otherwise it was a lineup of white males—mostly the same old lions who had influenced my generation of nonfiction writers: H. L. Mencken, George Orwell, Joseph Mitchell, Alfred Kazin, E. B. White, Alan Moorehead, Norman Mailer, Red Smith. I included three scientists who wrote with clarity and warmth (René Dubos, Loren Eiseley, and Lewis Thomas); an architect (Moshe Safdie); a film critic (James Agee); a music critic (Virgil Thomson); and a few other favorite stylists (Garry Wills, V. S. Pritchett), all highly respectable. But a few outlaws sneaked into the tent. One was Hunter S. Thompson, author of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, a narcotic salute to the departed ’60s. Another was Richard Burton, the Welsh actor, writing about his national religion of rugby. Both writers exemplified my point about the boundless hospitality of nonfiction. I also didn’t think they would turn up in any other books on writing.

My book was also heavily male in its language. The writer was referred to as “he” or “him.” So was the reader (“Coax the reader a little more; keep him inquisitive”). So was every other generic type: the humorist, the columnist, the critic. I was the product of a cultural lineage that excluded women by pronoun and never gave their absence a second thought. It would be another decade before Casey Miller and Kate Swift’s Handbook of Nonsexist Writing came along to wake us all up.

Another person who got excluded from my book was me. I was present as an authority figure, a teacher handing down teacherlike advice. But there was no mention of the work I had done in a long career of writing for newspapers and magazines. How had I dealt with the problems I was so blithely telling readers how to solve? But I sailed through half the summer keeping my own experience out of my book.

The reason was a fear of immodesty, born of the injunction that wasps shouldn’t “make a show” of themselves. It was all right for me to explain the decisions that other writers made, but not the ones I had made. Only gradually did that affectation strike me as foolish. I would find myself remembering some assignment that taught me a useful lesson, and I would think, “If that was so helpful to me, it would be helpful to other writers.” So I dipped my toe in the forbidden stream, allowing myself to describe how I constructed certain articles. But I never quite stopped expecting a knock on the door by the reticence police.

So the three months of summer raced by, the rattle of my Underwood mingling with the chatter of birds in the woods behind my shed, until Labor Day played its annual terminator role and sent us all back to New Haven. By then my book was about 85 percent finished, and I was pleased with its tone. Although the college division of Harper & Row, my longtime publisher, had given me a tentative nod of approval, it didn’t feel like a textbook. One day the thought popped into my head that the book might also appeal to general readers, and I told my trade editor at Harper’s, Buz Wyeth, that I would also be submitting it to him. I packed up the manuscript and took it down to the Niantic post office and mailed it in.

In mid-October Buz called to say he would like to publish the book in a hard-cover trade edition. That was a bolder decision than it may appear today; there was no book quite like it and no assurance that it would find a popular audience. Back at Yale, I wrote the remaining chapters, between other tasks, in my Branford College office, which was located beneath Harkness Tower and its 44-bell carillon. The book, called On Writing Well, was published in the spring of 1976—a slender volume of only 151 pages, its size only 8½ by 5½ inches. Nobody who saw it would expect it to be anything but what it was—just one man’s journey.

The book got a few pleasant reviews and sold in modest numbers, matching my own modest expectations. I had no inkling that On Writing Well would shift the direction of my life, taking me far beyond the classrooms of Yale. I began to get letters and calls from colleges inviting me to come and talk about writing to their students and faculty—a visit that often began with a lecture that was open to the whole town. Deciding which invitations to accept, I chose colleges in parts of America where I had never been. Almost all of them were colleges I had never heard of.

Today their names come back to me in a kaleidoscope of memory—small liberal arts colleges, their Gothic buildings woven into the landscape of town life. Some of those names are Whitworth College in Spokane, Washington; Centenary College in Shreveport, Louisiana; Gustavus Adolphus College in St. Peter, Minnesota; Millikin College in Decatur, Illinois; Ohio Wesleyan College in Delaware, Ohio; Denison College in Granville, Ohio, and Kentucky Wesleyan College in Owensboro, Kentucky. In memory I also revisit big universities with teeming campuses: Boise State, Wright State, Southeastern Missouri State, Brigham Young, the University of Arizona, the University of Southern Indiana, the University of Wisconsin. . . . On all those campuses I found professors dedicated to the nuts-and-bolts labor of teaching students to write well—doing a better job, I suspected, than it was being done at Ivy League colleges, where expository writing is a neglected waif in the temple of learning.

The huge bonus of those travels was to put me in touch with my readers. They told me which parts of the book they found most helpful and what subjects they hoped I would cover in future editions. What they liked most was that I made myself available. They weren’t hearing from a professor; they were hearing from a writer who had wrestled with the same problems they were facing. They also liked the book’s humor. Students, especially, couldn’t believe they had been assigned a textbook that actually made an effort to keep them amused.

So I was persuaded that my initial fear of immodesty was misguided. The best teachers of a craft, I saw, are their own best textbook. Students who take their classes really want to know how they do what they do—how they grew into their knowledge and learned from their wrong turns. Thereafter, in every edition, I wrote more revealingly, trusting my readers to trust me if I veered down some unlikely trail of anecdote to illustrate a point.

It now occurs to me that I didn’t really find my style until I wrote On Writing Well, at the late age of 52. Until then my style more probably reflected who I wanted to be perceived as—the urbane columnist and humorist and critic. Only when I started writing as a teacher and had no agenda except to be helpful did my style become integrated with my personality and my character.

For the second edition, in 1980, I responded to those early readers’ questions. I updated topical references and matters of usage, adding a section on jargon—a plague that teachers told me they found troublesome. At the request of many readers I wrote a chapter called “Writing in Your Job.” Most of that writing is pompous and impenetrable, damaging the organization it represents. My chapter tried to explain that institutions can be made human.

I broadened the “Sports” chapter to note some of the darker forces that had begun to corrupt that once-sanitized world. I also expanded the “Humor” chapter, which had previously dealt only with the uses of topical humor to make a serious point. Since then I had taught a humor-writing course at Yale that situated American humor in its longer historical context. Now I provided that history, adding passages by such pioneers as George Ade, Don Marquis, Ring Lardner, Donald Ogden Stewart, Robert Benchley, James Thurber, and S. J. Perelman.

So the book went back out into the world stronger and more helpful—and still less than 200 pages long.

By 1985, when it was time for a third edition, I had long been back in New York City, busy with writing projects that taught me many new lessons. One was a long piece for The New Yorker about a trip I took to Shanghai with the musicians Willie Ruff and Dwike Mitchell in 1981, when they introduced live jazz to China. In my article I dutifully explained everything I was absolutely sure a reader would need to know about Ruff and Mitchell and how I felt about their music. But the editor of The New Yorker, William Shawn, eliminated most of those sections, assuring me that the points I was so determined to make were implicit. I was nervous, but Shawn was right—readers had no trouble getting the point.

That lesson would strengthen everything I wrote thereafter. I learned to delete every word or phrase or sentence that told readers something they had already been enabled to know or were bright enough to deduce. I also tried to stop using phrases like of course and adverbs like surprisingly, predictably, understandably, and ironically, which place a value on a sentence before the reader has a chance to read it. Readers, I learned, are not as dumb as the writer thinks; they must be given room to play their role in the act of writing—to discover for themselves what’s surprising or predictable or understandable or ironic. They don’t want that pleasure usurped. That struck me as an important lesson, and I put it into a new section called “Trust Your Material.”

I also wrote a highly personal final chapter about the values that shaped my own writing, starting with the ethical values of my parents. Called “Write as Well as You Can,” it stated my credo that writers must set higher standards for their work than anyone else does—and must defend what they write against every editor or publisher or agent who tries to distort or dilute it.

But the biggest revolution was in the technology of how writers did their writing. Overnight, they had been given a machine called a word processor that wrenched them away from the bone-deep process of putting words on paper, and they were fearful about making the leap. Nobody was more fearful than I. But I forced myself to go out and buy one of the new contraptions, an early ibm behemoth, and to puzzle out its arcane commands (“initialize diskette”), discovering that it miraculously eased the drudgery of writing and rewriting and retyping. That also called for a new chapter.

Those three new chapters ran at the end of the third edition, adding substance to the book without pulling apart its fabric.

By 1990, however, America had changed considerably. On Writing Well was a child of the 1970s. I knew that its principles were still valid. But what about its references and its tone? Would it strike a new generation of readers as an old man’s book? I took a closer look and saw that my 14-year-old product was slowly slipping out of touch. Without a major overhaul it would wither and die.

Most obviously, much of the nonfiction I now admired was written by women. Yet my excerpted passages were still mostly by men—the graybeards who had been models for my generation of journalists, now gray-bearded ourselves. The language was also lopsidedly male; he and him were still the prevailing pronouns, though women readers had chided me for referring to the reader as he, pointing out that they did much of the nation’s reading and resented having to picture themselves as men.
I began by hacking at the pronouns. I found more than 100 places where I could eliminate he, him, his, himself, and man, either by switching to the plural or by altering some other component of the sentence. Then I took another look at all those male writers. Some of them no longer served my purposes and were gently eased overboard. I wrote a new chapter, on memoir, the glamorous new belle of the nonfiction form, and that provided a natural habitat for such newly fledged memoirists as Eudora Welty (One Writer’s Beginnings), Patricia Hampl (A Romantic Education), and Vivian Gornick (Fierce Attachments).

Other strong women tumbled into chapters that almost seemed to be waiting for them: the nature writer Diane Ackerman, the science writer Dava Sobel, the Texas regional writer Prudence Mackintosh, the movie critic Molly Haskell, the literary critic Cynthia Ozick. All of them came bearing new sensitivities that gave the book an emotional tenor it had lacked. Many of them also brought new information. Janice Kaplan, one of my Yale students, had carved a journalistic beat out of the immense gains made by women in physical stamina and athletic performance, and I expanded my sports chapter to include two passages from her magazine pieces.

Another woman writer, Kennedy Fraser, reviewing a book about the abused girlhood of Virginia Woolf, a tireless writer of journals, dia¬ries, and letters, revealed that what Woolf wrote in those intimate forms had been crucially helpful to her and other women contending with similar demons of loneliness and pain. Fraser’s voice of vulnerability, stunningly honest, had never been heard in the male-oriented world of On Writing Well. The “Humor” chapter was also stuck in the dark ages, and I added passages by writers like Woody Allen, Nora Ephron, and Garrison Keillor, who were tilting at modern quandaries and neuroses.

Finally, I wrote a new chapter called “A Writer’s Decisions.” I had discovered that the crippling problem for many writers is not how to write, but how to organize what they have written. Yet that skill is almost never mentioned or taught in writing classes. My chapter, strictly pedagogical, using myself as a laboratory specimen, analyzes sequentially the big and small decisions that went into a long magazine article about a trip that Caroline and I made to Timbuktu to look for a camel caravan in the Sahara. Teachers have told me that the chapter is unusually helpful because it puts readers into the mind of the writer during the process of construction.

When that fourth edition was published, in 1990, On Writing Well had sold a half-million copies. Bigger spurts were still to come. But they wouldn’t have been achieved without the regular tune-ups that saved the book from the fatal sin of not keeping up with the times.

Demographically, as always, America refused to hold still. By 1994 a tidal wave of immigration had reshaped the national character. Around me, the neighborhoods of New York were suddenly a tapestry of exotic faces, clothes, languages, shops, signs, foods, sounds, smells, and ceremonial customs. On Writing Well could no longer overlook those lively new Americans, and in the fifth edition I added a half-dozen passages by writers from other cultural traditions.

One passage, from The Woman Warrior, by Maxine Hong Kingston, the daughter of Chinese immigrants in Stockton, California, describes the acute shyness and embarrassment of being a child starting school in a strange land. Another, from Halfway to Dick and Jane: A Puerto Rican Pilgrimage, by Jack Agüeros, recalls the author’s boyhood in an urban neighborhood where several ethnic principalities existed within a single block, all fiercely defended.

Not all my writers from other cultures were born in other countries. Some grew up in the United States but felt no less like outsiders in white America. One was James Baldwin, whose The Fire Next Time, an electrifying account of his years as a boy preacher in Harlem, I still remembered 30 years later. Another native-born outsider, Lewis P. Johnson, a great-grandson of the last recognized chief of the Potawatomi Ottawas, describes a bittersweet quest for his lost identity in an essay called “For My Indian Daughter.”

Those immigrant and minority writers filled still another hole in On Writing Well. With my safely chosen samples of writing from my own culture, I had undoubtedly suggested that the only writers worth emulating were white people leading mainstream lives. Now I wanted to tell Americans of every ethnic origin that their own narratives were no less valid and that they could use forms like memoir to contend with the pain of adjusting to a new homeland.

The “Science and Technology” chapter was also showing its age. The writing was still fresh, but the science wasn’t. Partial rescue came with an article in Scientific American, written with warmth and linear clarity, on “The Future of the Transistor,” by Robert W. Keyes. But my big break came when I saw in The New York Times that the winner of the National Magazine Award for 1993 in the coveted category of reporting, defeating such traditional champs as The New Yorker, The Atlantic, Newsweek, and Vanity Fair, was a magazine called I.E.E.E. Spectrum. I don’t think I was the only reader of the Times who hadn’t heard of it. It turned out to be the magazine of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, a professional association with 320,000 members. I found its office in the Manhattan telephone directory and walked over and got a copy of the award-winning article, “How Iraq Reverse-Engineered the Bomb,” by Glenn Zorpette.

The awards committee was right—it was a gem of investigative reporting. Constructed like a detective story, it traced the efforts of the International Atomic Energy Agency to monitor a secret program whereby the Iraqis, in violation of the agency’s disclosure rules, came close to building an atomic bomb. Zorpette’s article also couldn’t have been more current; Iraq and its weapons haven’t been out of the news since.

After that fifth edition, almost all the new material in On Writing Well (in the sixth edition, in 1998; the 25th anniversary edition, in 2001; and the 30th anniversary edition, in 2006) was self-generated, not written in response to external change. I wasn’t the same person who sat typing in a shed in Connecticut in 1974; the book and I had grown older together. Books that teach, if they have a long life, should reflect who the writer has become at later stages of his own long life—what new work he has done and how his thinking has evolved.

Among other changes, I had become more interested in the intangibles—beyond craft—that produce the best writing: matters of character, intention, values, confidence, and enjoyment. I had also done many kinds of writing that I had never tried before. Three were highly reportorial books: Mitchell & Ruff, about jazz; Spring Training, about baseball; and American Places, about 15 iconic American sites. In those books I learned to gather hundreds of facts and to let those facts speak for themselves, unvarnished. I learned to generate emotion by getting other people to tell me things they felt strongly about, not by waxing emotional myself. I learned not to wax.

Above all, I returned to the classroom. Since 1993 I’ve taught a night class in memoir writing at the New School, in New York, for men and women eager to go in search of who they are, who they once were, and what heritage they were born into. Teaching that class revealed two immobilizing traits I wouldn’t otherwise have known about. One was structural, the other psychological.

Most people starting on a memoir, I found, can already picture the jacket of the book: their name in big type, the handsome lettering of the title, and the tinted photograph of a child holding a pail by the seashore. They can also picture exactly what the book will say and how it will be constructed. Their biggest problem is how to find an agent and get it published. The only thing they haven’t thought about is how to actually write the book. Nobody has told them that they will only discover its shape and its content in the act of writing it—and that the finished book won’t much resemble the one they had in mind.

To focus my students on the process, rather than on the finished product, I invented a writing course that doesn’t require any writing. I only ask the women and men in my class to talk about their hopes and intentions and about the possible ways of getting where they want to go. That forces them to confront all the prior decisions that memoir insists on: matters of voice, tone, tense, attitude, scope, narrative, and the privacy of their family and friends. How do they plan to reduce the vast jumble of memories clamoring to be sorted out and described? A new chapter was written on that subject, called “The Tyranny of the Final Product.”

Teasing memories out of those bright and accomplished adults, I was also struck by how unconfident they were, how apologetic, how uncertain of the worthiness of the tale they wanted to tell, although the stories they eventually dredged up from the past always moved the rest of us with their powerful emotions. Women, in particular, felt that they needed permission to believe in their remembered truth. To give them that permission I wrote two new chapters: “The Sound of Your Voice” and “Enjoyment, Fear and Confidence.”
Later, in 2006, I added a chapter on family history, a cousin of memoir that is now attracting boomers and retired people, drawn by new technology that enables them to self-publish their saga for their children, their grandchildren, their friends, and their local library or historical society. With that chapter I felt that I had said almost everything a nonfiction writer might need to know. It only took 30 years.

On Writing Well sold its millionth copy in 2000. (Sales are now approaching 1.5 million.) It was a figure I could hardly believe or even imagine; I’ve never thought of myself as a “best-selling” author, and I’m still surprised to hear that someone knows my name and my books. The numbers that mean the most to me are the hundreds of readers who have written or called just to say how much they like the book and how much it helped them. Surprisingly often they use the phrase “You changed my life.” I don’t take that to mean that they found Buddhist enlightenment or quit smoking. What they mainly mean is that I cleaned out the sludge in their thinking that had paralyzed them from doing writing of any kind—a phobia not unlike the fear of cleaning out the closets or the basement. (The hard part of writing isn’t the writing; it’s the thinking.) Now, they tell me, I’m at their side whenever they write, exhorting them to cut every word or phrase or sentence or paragraph that isn’t doing necessary work. That, finally, is the life-changing message of On Writing Well: simplify your language and thereby find your humanity.

I particularly like to hear from people who came upon the book by surprise, never having thought of themselves as writers, and were taken by its sense of enjoyment. The following letter, from a young woman in Orlando, speaks for all the voyagers whose affection for the book has kept me company on the journey:

“I am the night duty manager at a resort campground. I have never aspired to being a writer, but I was persuaded to take over the job of reporter, writer and editor of our weekly newsletter. Because of my moaning and groaning about what to write and how to write it, my boyfriend gave me a copy of On Writing Well. Now I’m having a real blast!”


Baca selengkapnya……

25 April 2009

YOU HAVE TO WANT IT BAD

by Susan Taylor Brown


There are two kinds of writers: those who want to write and those who want to have written. Let’s talk about the second group first.

People who want to “have written” tend to hang around with writers and talk about the big plans they have after their book hits the bestseller list. They join critique groups but don’t share their work, or if they do, they don’t take any constructive criticism to heart. They plan to write “someday” when they retire or their kids are raised or they win the lottery and build that big office on the hill facing the ocean.

What they don’t do is write.

The first group of writers wants to write and publish so bad they can taste it. They eat, drink, and sleep words. They hear voices — the voices of characters demanding the chance to tell their stories. They watch life play out in front of them and wonder how they can use it in a book. They take classes, join critique groups, get up early and write before work or stay up late to write long after everyone else in the house has gone to bed. They write, rewrite, and then write some more.

Which group are you in?

With writing, as with most things in life, you have to put yourself into it before you get something out of it. That means giving up some of that time you used to spend watching television, playing games, sleeping late, or even hanging out with friends and family. Because get one thing straight right now: Writing is work. It means real-izing that the first or second or third or maybe even the tenth version of a story still might not be ready for publication, and it means submitting rejected manuscripts again and again until they find a home.

Perseverance wins.

Think about your most well-written manuscript at the moment. Have you sent it out yet? How many rejection slips have you collected on it? Two? Three? Ten?

Not enough.

Robert M. Pirsig's bestselling book Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance was rejected more than 120 times before being published. To Think That I Saw It on Mul-berry Street, by Dr. Seuss, collected 29 rejection slips before it found a home.

Stephen King received 84 rejections for a short story that eventually sold to Cavalier magazine.

How many rejection slips are in your bottom drawer right now? Why aren’t those manuscripts back in the mail already?

Thinking about writing isn’t writing.

Talking about writing isn’t writing.
Dreaming about writing isn’t writing.
Only writing is writing.

Millions of people dream of publishing a book someday but that’s all they do about it —dream.

You might not have any control over whether or not an editor buys your work, but
you do have control over finishing your manuscript and getting it into the editor’s hands.

Writers love to procrastinate. We can find 101 other things to do instead of write, even when we have an idea nagging at us, begging to be put down on paper. If you want to write you have to sit down and write. If you want to be published, you have to send your words out into the world and take your chances with the rest of us. It’s as simple, and as difficult, as that. The more you write, the better you get and the better your chances of actually being published.

Exercise your writing muscles.

Put in the time to learn your craft and realize that yes, you will have to pay some dues along the way. Little girls practice for years before they become lead ballerinas. A football team practices for hours every day before the big game. Musicians expect to play a lot of scales. Yet many new writers balk at the thought of putting in the same amount of dedication and determination to become better writers. Just be-cause you learned how to write sentences in the first grade doesn’t mean you al-ready know how to write. Do your homework, practice, and read, read, read.

If you want to write a mystery, read mysteries. Lots of them. Are short stories for the Christian market your thing? Send for sample copies of the magazines you want to write for and read the stories. Want to try your hand at a self-help article in the women’s market? You know what to do — read.

Writing takes work. Hard work.

It takes perseverance. It takes believing in yourself and in your right to write, even when no one else seems to care.

"Take chances. You will succeed if you are fearless of failure," says author Natalie Goldberg in her inspirational book Writing Down The Bones.

So you want to be a writer? Great! But remember, you get out of your writing and your career what you put into it. There's no shortcut.

You have to want it bad. Bad enough to do the work, and then work some more.









Baca selengkapnya……

GET YOUR FOOT IN THE DOOR AND YOUR FICTION INTO PRINT

by Susan Taylor Brow


Many writers throw themselves at the door of the big glossy high-paying magazines hoping for a prestigious short story sale that will launch their career. There’s nothing wrong with that but the odds are enormous and the frustration increases with every rejection slip. Faced with rejections, writers often give up before their careers ever get a chance to get off the ground.

One thing you can do to reduce your chances for rejection is to start off with some of the lesser- known or lower paying magazines and then build upon your successes. Standard, Glimmer Train, Fantastic and The Sun all publish fiction and encourage emerging fiction writers. They also agree that it is often a writer’s passion for a story that unlocks the door to publication. But beyond that, each magazine has a defined focus as unique as each writer’s set of fingerprints. Read on for some tips from the editors of these four magazines.

If the main character in your story looks to God for direction and strength, Standard Magazine might be a good possibility. Editor Dr. Everett Leadingham has a clearly defined focus. “Three things are important: Believable characters and story line, not too-predictable ending and to be within the framework of Standard's mission --showing Christianity in action.” He also warns that, “Writers often give everything away with their titles and first paragraphs.”

At Glimmer Train the emphasis is on literary short fiction; no blood and gore, no graphic violence, and no science fiction. “We look for work that is extremely well written and that is also emotionally affecting,” explains editor Linda Swanson-Davies. “The pieces we print influence how we look at ourselves, other people, the world at large. We want to be somehow enlarged by a story and the perspective it offers.”

If your main characters are more likely to be quirky creatures from another planet, they might be more at home somewhere else, say a galaxy such as Fantastic Stories of the Imagination. Editor Ed McFadden looks for fantasy and science fiction in all their forms.
“Usually the story must have something new or different about it—cutting edge. While I do publish traditional fantasy, space opera, etc., these stories must be ex-ceptional. For a new writer, a new idea or concept would provide a greater chance of publication. And it must entertain the reader. That’s what this is all about.”

What if your story seems to defy categorization? Perhaps you need a magazine that defies categorization as well. The Sun Magazine is open to just about anything. “We like personal writing that's deep and genuine,” explains editor Sy Safransky. “No cynical or fashionable or trendy writing. Our writers don't shy away from strong emotions, whether joyous or sad.” His vision for The Sun Magazine is crystal clear. “I want The Sun to be a magazine that tells the truth; a magazine that sees the world as it is, without flinching; a magazine that celebrates the power of love without ig-noring the destructive forces around us. I think that most of the writing we print is top-notch. But sometimes I’m willing to publish something that isn’t so skillfully writ-ten if it gets me closer to the heartache and the glory of being human. To some other editors, upholding certain literary standards may be more important. Each ap-proach, I believe, has value.

Choose the Right Market for your Story

Increase your chances for a sale by making sure that your story is a good match for the publication you have chosen. Study the markets well before you send out your work. Start by reading the magazine and the writer’s guidelines. It should be obvious but often basic editorial needs are overlooked. Don’t send a 5,000 word story when the limit is 1,500 words. If the guidelines say they don’t publish fiction, don’t expect your short story to be the first to make them break with tradition. Most magazines now have a website and you can get the guidelines there. When you go to a writer’s conference, pay attention to what the editors say they are looking for and what to avoid.. Editors want to say yes to your story. It makes their job easier if the first story they pick up out of the slush pile is a winner. Make it easy for them to say yes.

“Follow my guidelines and write a good story,” says McFadden.

Leadingham agrees that writers need to “show evidence that they have researched enough to know what Standard is--a denominational, take-home Sunday School pa-per. Show me some good writing skills (grammar, spelling, elements of fiction-writing) about a subject that fits our mission--showing Christianity in action.”

Ease the way for acceptances by paying attention to a magazine’s submission guide-lines. For example Glimmer Train prefers submissions via their website and Standard likes to have the stories emailed to them. On the other hand, Fantastic Stories and The Sun don’t accept email submissions at all.

Swanson-Davies explains, “It's very wise to be familiar with a pub before submitting work for publication. It's silly to send a romance novel to a literary short story pub-lisher, for instance. Read the pub's guidelines before making submissions. Read your story aloud before deciding to submit it: you'll catch errors, hear its strong points, feel--or not feel--the story's strength. Do you use lots of adjectives, adverbs? If so, you may not be choosing the RIGHT nouns and verbs. Every word counts--choose each with care.”

“Write honestly and movingly about something that's important to you,” says Sa-fransky. “You have to be familiar with the publication. Blind submissions only waste everyone's time.”

Do editors read every story from start to finish? Some do and some don’t. “It de-pends,” says McFadden. “There are many manuscripts that can be ruled out after a few pages. You would be surprised at how good I am at telling you all about a story, including how it will end, after only reading a few pages.”

“I want to see how the author ends the story,” adds Leadingham. “Sometimes good beginnings fizzle away into nothing endings. At other times poor beginnings turn around by the end. In a few cases, I don't read past the first page.”

Strive to hook your reader from the very first line. Strong writing and an evocative story will keep Swanson-Davis turning pages. “Usually a few paragraphs will tell us how strong the author's writing skills are. If they are top notch and the story holds our interests, we will read on.”

An Ever-changing Market

It’s important to be aware of current trends in the fiction market but be careful. Knowing which topics to avoid is as important as knowing which trends to follow. Sometimes, by the time you write toward the trend, it’s already finished.

“Certain subjects seem to come in clumps,” says Leadingham, “like the writers had a meeting somewhere that I wasn't invited to attend and decided to submit the same kinds of articles in the same month.”

If you hear an editor speak about a need for cozy mysteries featuring nurses with insomnia and you just happen to have a story like that in your bottom drawer, go for it. But be aware that a lot of other writers heard that same editor speak about the same thing and very likely raced home to write just such a story.

On Taking Chances

Writers need to be brave; brave enough to submit and brave enough to face rejec-tion. Don’t listen to unsupportive friends or spouses who spout statistics about the odds against you. Do your market research, write your story, make it as good as you can, and then, send it out into the world. Sometimes you’ll make a match and some-times you won’t. But it’s a cinch that you can’t sell what you don’t submit.

Leadingham encourages new writers to persevere in spite of the odds. “Statistics are against the writer. I have space to publish less than 10 percent of the manuscripts I receive. However, new writers should keep two things in mind: (1) Don't take the rejection personally. I don't know you. I am simply making the decision that this par-ticular piece does not fit what I need right now. (2) Some other editor may be look-ing for such a piece. Don't stop with one rejection. Send it to other editors with simi-lar magazines. Keep trying.”

McFadden agrees that persistence is the key. “Rejection is part of any career. I tell new writers that achieving publication requires persistence. Keep sending out your work and try not to get discouraged by rejection. Most magazines and book compa-nies get far more manuscripts than they can publish. Many times rejection has noth-ing to do with the quality of the story, but the economics of the business. To increase your chances of publication two major themes will always help. A) Know where and who you are sending you story to. Read the magazine; read interviews with the edi-tor and the editors guidelines. Example: Sending me a story about cats is a waste of time regardless of how good the tale is—I hate cats and have said this on many oc-casions. B) Be professional and present yourself as a professional—follow the guide-lines!”

“Rejection is absolutely unavoidable,” adds Swanson-Davies. “It is NOT personal. (We have sometimes hated one story an author has submitted, but LOVED another.) We have a great deal of respect for writers and appreciate the work even of writers who have not yet developed the skills that will make their work publishable, as long as it's cleared that they've invested themselves in their stories. There are not enough publications that are able to stay alive to publish all the good work that is written. Authors should submit their work to publications that publish work the author ad-mires and enjoys. (If you share the editors' tastes, you've got a big advantage--you're probably already striving to produce work that would interest them.”

Final Thoughts

No matter how many tips the editors share, or how many submission guidelines you read, the final step is up to you.

Safransky reminds writers, “The only way to have any odds of getting published is to submit work. Don't be afraid of failure. You'll only regret that you never tried.”

Swanson-Davies loves to discover new talent. “Writers should know how much fun it is for an editor to call an unpublished writer and ask to publish their work,. Being unpublished is not a disadvantage. And one more thing: READ! So often people are driven by their need to write and don't spend time or money on other people's writ-ing, but it's going to be VERY tough to adequately sharpen one's skills without know-ing what great writing looks like. The writers who read and love great writing have, by far, the best chance of achieving it themselves.”

Remember that editors want you to succeed; they want to buy good stories for their magazines. Without a steady influx of new manuscripts, the magazines would soon go out of business. But think before you act, cautions McFadden. “Don’t just send your stories out willy-nilly. Understand the market you are trying to break into and craft your fiction toward that market. Another approach is to just write what you want, then try and find a market for it. The former is how most professionals do it, while the latter is how most newbies do it. Neither is wrong. Try and find you own voice. I get so many manuscripts that are just imitations of Tolkien, or Dick, and these stories fail. Have something to say without being preachy. The best stories I have read or have published have a meaning beneath their entertainment.”

“Make a game out of the rejection slips rather than taking each one as a rejection of you as a person,” suggests Leadingham. “It is just part of the business. I have sev-eral writers who must send me more than 50 manuscripts a year, yet I might publish them only four or five times in a year. They just keep plugging away.”

Knowledge really is power. Get to know the magazines you want to write for, and get to know the editors behind the magazine. There’s a lot they can teach you.

"The best advice I have for writers," Safransky concludes, "is not to listen to any-one's advice. Beyond that, I agree with Woody Allen’s observation that eighty per-cent of life is just showing up. If you want to be a writer, write. Write every day if you can. Don’t worry if someone else - - particularly an editor you’ve never met - - doesn’t think your work is any good. Remember, too, that talking about writing is only that: talk. Talking about writing is as different from writing as talking about breathing is from taking your next breath.”

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WHAT MAKES A REAL WRITER?

by Susan Taylor Brown

  • A real writer knows she has chosen a way of life and not just a job.
  • A real writer knows she may not necessarily get published (though many real writers are).
  • A real writer loves playing with words.
  • A real writer is patient and understands that the writing process, as well as the publication process, is a waiting game.
  • A real writer is self-motivating and doesn't wait for the muse to tell her what or when to write.
  • A real writer is able to see things from many points of view.
  • A real writer wants to learn about new things.
  • A real writer is willing to practice the craft of writing.
  • A real writer is a thinker, constantly obsessed with ideas.
  • A real writer wants to probe feelings and emotions and ask "why."
  • A real writer enjoys sharing her knowledge with others.
  • A real writer has healthy amounts of stamina and perseverance to jump over writer's block and other hurdles.
  • A real writer has a constant awareness of the world around her.
  • A real writer understands that writing is hard work.
  • A real writer is able to bounce back from rejection.
  • A real writer is curious and willing to exploit that curiosity.
  • A real writer is willing to revise and understands that no words are written in stone.
  • A real writer is able to take constructive criticism.
  • A real writer acts like a professional long before they are she is called a pro-fessional.
  • A real writer is able to work alone.
  • A real writer can balance on the freelancer's financial teeter-totter.
  • A real writer knows she has to make a commitment to writing and the part it plays in her life as well as taking responsibility for her own personal writing growth.
  • A real writer believes in herself and her work even when no one else does.
  • A real writer sets goals to help them make her dreams come true.
Take charge of your writing life. Be a real writer.

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FIRST LINES IN FICTION

by Susan Taylor Brown

You never get a second chance to make a first impression, we're told when we're young. When writing fiction for children of any age this is good advice to remember. With the lure of the Internet, fast-action video games, and reality-based televi¬sion, it's often tough to get kids to sit down and read a book. As writers, it's our job to craft an opening to our book or story that will grab the reader's attention and not let go. And your very first reader is the editor you hope will buy your work.

So what do editors look for in openings?
"A fresh concept," says Stephanie Lurie, President and Publisher of Pen¬guin Putnam. "An authentic voice. Humor or drama. A definite point of view. Intrigue—a reason to keep on reading. The old adage `begin your story as close to the climax as possi¬ble' remains true."

"I look for either a stimulating scene that raises a lot of questions to which I'm inter-ested in finding the answers, or for a compelling voice that invites me in instantly," says Emma Dryden, Executive Director at Margaret K. McElderry Books/Simon & Schuster.

Just what will capture an editor's attention is often hard to characterize. "I hope for a con-cept that grabs me. I want to be immediately immersed in the story. And that is some-thing that is difficult to define. Usually, it's something personal and powerful. Something that gives me a glimpse into character or story," says Lissa Halls Johnson, Book Producer for Focus on the Family.

Nicole Geiger, Publisher of Tricycle Press, searches for, "Something that grabs me for myr-iad reasons, such as wonderful phrasing or unusual sub¬ject or because now I'm curious. This is highly subjective, of course, as is all writing."

An Investment

Writers and editors agree that the idea behind a strong opening is to con¬vince the reader that the rest of the story is worth the investment of time that a reader will have to make.

"I want the reader to go on read¬ing," says Nancy Werlin, author of Black Mirror (Dial) and the Edgar award-winning novel The Killer's Cousin (Delacorte). "I want to throw out a mysterious hint or two of the depths and mysteries lurking ahead. I want to intrigue. Mostly I do this by immediately getting the reader to ask questions, and by evoking some strong emotion as fast as I can." Wer¬lin does just that with this opening from Black Mirror:
Have you ever been in a state of pain so intense, it was like a living creature wound tightly around your rib cage and shoul¬ders and neck?

The reader is compelled to turn the page and find out what could possibly cause such pain and how the main character will resolve the situation.

Cynthia Leitich Smith, who writes from a Native American point of view, says that she of-ten strives to shift ex¬pectations with her openings. "The vast majority of Native American chil¬dren's books are historicals or retellings. Those few set today gener¬ally take place on reservations. This is so much true that publishing anything else generates commentary. My books have contemporary Native themes, and are all set in small towns, suburbs, or big cities. So, I sometimes use a first line or paragraph to shift ex¬pectations and establish context."

A good example is found in the opening of Smith's book Rain Is Not My Indian Name (Harper): “That night, Galen and I jogged under the ice-trimmed branches of oaks and sugar maples, never guessing that somebody was watching us through ruffled country curtains and hooded miniblinds. We should've known. Small town people make the best spies."

Linda Sue Park, the Newbery award-winning author of A Single Shard (Clarion), believes that the "first line should engage and/or intrigue and the first paragraph should begin to establish character." She continues, "Three of my four novels begin with a line of dialogue. I find this to be a useful trick. It helps avoid the pitfall of beginning a novel with back-story. Instead, writer and (eventually) reader are right in the middle of something. It also starts that process of establish¬ing character. With Shard, early drafts began with a scene of Tree-ear scav¬enging chicken bones and sucking out the marrow. I wanted his poverty ev¬ident right from the start. I liked the scene, but it was missing a crucial el¬ement: the relationship with Crane-man, which for me is the backbone of the entire story. So I re-worked the scene to include both Crane-man and hunger. The chicken bones were saved for another meal."

Disappointing Starts

Often writers will spend considerable time on their openings only to find that when they get to the end of the book, the book has changed in such a way that the opening no longer works. Writers shouldn't be afraid to use an opening as a jump start to their story but they should be equally un¬afraid to toss away those first few openings in search of the perfect opening.

"The once upon a time approach is too old-fashioned and cliche these days to be wholly successful; writers should try to be as imaginative as pos¬sible and need not feel all de-scriptions of time, place, and character need to be addressed in the first sentences of a story," says Dryden.

"Many writers start their hooks way before their story actually begins," says Dian Curtis Regan, author of the popular Monster of the Month Club books.

According to Lurie, a common mis¬take writers make with their openings is to "begin with a downer, e.g.: 'Emily was bored. A long summer stretched ahead of her, and there was nothing to do.' The reader will be as bored as Emily. Why should we keep on read¬ing? I would much rather read a novel that began: 'Emily sat in the middle of the steaming sidewalk with five dog leashes wrapped around her legs. Her ears rang as four dogs barked furiously at the Dalmatian that was running off. "Why did I go into this business?" she asked herself and wondered what she was going to tell Marguerite's owner tonight."' Lurie continues: "Or they try to say everything in the first sentence, e.g., 'Thirteen-year-old Carol McCully's brown eyes flashed as she threw down the pen her stepmother had given her on the day her father remarried."'

Equally disappointing, says Johnson, is that authors often "start in a place of inactivity—the character waking in the morning, or something equally as slow. The only time this works is when the action is going to toss the character out of bed. Then, you have the conflict of peace versus chaos shown quite quickly. The peace¬ful lying in bed is actually an intrin¬sic part of the story."

Picture Books versus Novels

Dryden speaks of the differences be¬tween openings in picture books and novels. "An au-thor has more time to work out story, character, and plot in a novel, so a novel can afford to open more slowly than a picture book. A picture book doesn't have time to waste—and a picture book audience is impatient—so the first line of a pic¬ture book must instantly grab a reader of any age and it must instantly set up something critical about the story and/or the main character."

"In a picture book," adds Lurie, "every line is key because there are (or should be) so few words. The first page of a picture book should introduce the character and perhaps start to set up the situation. In a novel, the author has a little bit more time to intrigue the reader, set the mood, describe the scenery, etc., but if the character and situation aren't interest-ing on the first page, chances are good that the reader won't continue."

"Every line, every word, is incredi¬bly important in a picture book," says Geiger. "There are only a few hundred words, after all, or perhaps fewer. But there are also pictures to help carry the show, and the first line might be a single word (picture hooks as prose poem, for instance). A first line is pos¬sibly more important in a novel because that's the only tool the author has to draw in the reader." She adds, "with picture books, if we have to change the first line significantly, why are we buying this book?"

Evolution

Writers and their editors don't always agree on the perfect way to open a story.

"In my first novel," says Werlin, "my editor wanted to excise my first chapter and start with chapter two. This was a novel with three alternat¬ing viewpoint characters, and essen¬tially she was asking to pare it down to two. She won, because after a while I decided she was right. But she did¬n't ask to change the way I had written chapter two's opening, and on all other books, she has never once ques¬tioned my choice of an opening scene, para-graph, sentence."
But Park stresses the importance of clear communication between the writer and the edi-tor. "For The Kite Fighters, my editor thought the open¬ing did not establish setting quickly enough and she asked me to fix this. We discussed this over lunch, where I was not tak-ing notes, which may have been what led to a complete misun¬derstanding. I took a month to radi¬cally overhaul the first chapter, taking the brothers off the hillside where they were flying kites and putting them in a session with their tutor. She wrote back with (carefully controlled) dismay, saying that she much pre¬ferred the original opening and what she had meant was to put a single line at the start: 'Korea, fifteenth century.' So that is what we ended up doing. I did the same for Shard. For historicals, it is the easiest way to establish setting immediately."

Many writers go through an evo¬lutionary process with their openings, often finding their true opening buried within the existing story.

Werlin's The Killer's Cousin, opens:
My name, David Bernard Yaffe, will sound familiar, but you won't remember why—at least not at first. Most people, I've found, do not. I'm grateful for that. It gives me some space, however brief. However certain eventually to disintegrate.

"I didn't find the opening until the third draft of the book," Werlin says. "The key was un-derstanding that David wasn't just observing the action (as I'd thought earlier) but was hiding some secret of his own as well. I didn't know what that secret was, exactly, as I wrote the new opening—which came to me like a miracle at that point—but the knowledge of it lurk¬ing beneath the surface of the story acted as a guide to me as that draft leaped much closer to the book's final form. I literally pinned the two pages of the new prologue to the wall above my desk as an emotional guide as I wrote that draft; I knew I finally had the tone and mood I needed."

Werlin continues, "For Black Mir¬ror, I found the opening paragraph—which sits alone, without a chapter number or header of any kind at the beginning of the book—in the very middle of my first draft. I plucked it out and stuck it up front, where it had no context. Pure instinct; I didn't know at first why I wanted it up front but I did. I had to write my way into this ruling emotion before I could find it, but then I realized it was the over¬whelming mood of the book. This opening asks a question directly of the reader, involving him or her, and I think it also makes the reader wonder why it is that the speaker is in so much pain. The subliminal descrip¬tion, too, is of a snake, an invisible boa constrictor, and I wanted that to be horrifying but contained (because invisible)."

Werlin cites some basics for win¬ning openings: "a secret the reader needs to discover, concrete details, a strong voice, and emotion, which for me is almost always some variant on emotional pain, fear, or anxiety."

Some lucky writers find openings the easiest part of the writing process.
"My openings are the best part. They often come as pure inspiration, a total gift," says author Susan Hey¬boer O'Keefe, who penned this open¬ing to the novel My Life and Death by Alexandra Canarsie (Peachtree):

None of this would have hap¬pened, I suppose, if 1 had a nor¬mal hobby like skateboarding or hanging out at malls. But I don't do things like that. I go to the fu¬nerals of strangers.
"The hard part," O'Keefe says, "is fig¬uring out what to do for the rest of the book.”

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HOW I WRITE : ONE WRITER'S METHODS

by Susan Taylor Brown

I really hate to admit this, but I have lousy writing habits. I'm disorganized, my of-fice is a disaster zone, and I never seem to approach a project the same way twice. My mother tried for years to help me get more organized, but I just don’t think my DNA is programmed for organization. I have books and pens (I’m very picky about them --- just ask my husband) and scraps of paper everywhere and in every room in To be quite honest, I don't know if I could work any other way.

I write everywhere...in the car, on the couch, at my desk, in bed, and even in the bath. I love to play with words, which makes my fun and not just work.

Because I do several different kinds of writing, I work in a variety of ways, but they all seem to start with 3 things: an idea, a piece of paper, and a pen. To me, there's something physical about writing, and I almost always start a new book, story, or article in longhand. Later, when I go to transfer it to my computer, it seems to grow all by itself. When I hit a rough spot in the writing, I generally go back to pen and paper. I'm partial to steno tablets, since I can carry them easily with me back and forth to my day job or anywhere else I might go. I also like their size because I don't get intimidated seeing so much blank space around me, waiting for words to fill it up.

Like all writers, I spend a lot of time thinking. People who don't write often think we're just wasting time, but we're not. If I try to write before an idea has simmered properly, I have a much tougher time of it and I turn out a crummy piece of writing that usually doesn’t go anywhere. So I sit and think. A lot. I spend many hours sprawled on the couch with my dog or curled up in bed with pillows all around me. I jot down any ideas, no matter how crazy they might sound, that have to do with the project at hand. Sometimes this goes on for days or weeks or months, depending on the project.

That's why I work on many different projects at the same time. When one idea isn't working for me, I can turn the page in my notebook and work on something else. I'm always forgetting what notebook I started in, though, which is why I have so many of them all over the house. And sometimes I get ideas when I don't have a notebook with me, so I have scraps of important things to remember on the back of napkins, deposit slips, and grocery receipts. These usually land in a basket in the office for me to sort through later.

When the thoughts are coming almost too fast and too intense for me to write them down, that's when I move to computer. This is where it gets sloppy. If I'm writing by hand, my letters get huge and loopy. If I'm on the computer, I'm punching the keys hard and fast. It's the big adrenaline rush I'm after, and I want to nab as much of it as I can before it disappears. When I'm first racing to get everything down, I don't worry about spelling or punctuation or much of anything else. Some people call this free-writing. I just spew words on paper without thinking about whether they're the right words or what someone might say or think. The meat of the story is what I'm after. Later, after the heat of the moment has passed, then I go back and clean it all up, rearrange, add, delete, and rewrite. I do this no matter what I'm writing — fic-tion or non-fiction, books or articles. There are times when, rereading what I wrote fast and without thinking, I am absolutely amazed by what I've written. To be hon-est, there are just as many times when I reread it and know that it's not very good, but that's okay. The important thing is that I finally have something down, in some sort of order that looks like a story.

The second run-through is usually the toughest for me. That's when I see all the holes in the story that need to be filled in. When I don't know what happens next, it's back to the couch to think some more. This is usually when I start second-guessing myself, sure that what I thought was such a great idea is now nothing but garbage. It takes a lot of tough-love for yourself to keep writing at this point. At least for me. Depending on what I am working on, and what kind of a deadline I have, I repeat the above process over and over again. Sometimes it’s a matter of days, sometimes weeks, and with books, it could be years. (Yes, you heard me right – some books can take me years to write.) If I'm working on an article, I'll often go to the Internet to do some research on the topic, looking for experts in the area to give me some meaty quotes. That's usually enough to get me back to the computer to finish up the article.

If it's a book I'm working on, and I'm trying to fill in the holes or decide what hap-pens next, it can often be a lot tougher. I try bouncing ideas off a writing friend. I do a lot of brainstorming and mind-mapping. I play outlandish games of "what-if," hop-ing to jumpstart my brain in a different direction. Sometimes I'll grab a stack of in-dex cards and write a single sentence describing each scene I have already, on a separate card. Then I shuffle through the cards and see what my mind fills in by it-self. We writers are great procrastinators. Mostly it all comes down to just applying the seat of my pants to the seat of the chair and doing it.

After I feel I have a complete story, then comes my favorite part. Revision. I love to polish my manuscript, sort of like rubbing a genie's lamp and knowing something wonderful is going to be the end result. In the process of revision I ask myself a lot of questions. Do I use strong, picture words? Does one chapter flow into the next? Do my characters act and react consistently throughout the story? Is my plot inter-esting, filled with enough conflicts to make the reader want to keep turning pages? Each chapter of my book should be filled with questions. When you answer one ques-tion, you need to ask another one. Once you've stopped asking questions, the reader has no reason left to turn the pages, and the story is over.

Everyone wants to know where writers get their ideas. Ideas are everywhere and all around you. I have so many ideas, I think I have to live to be 157 before I can write about them all. My ideas come from watching and listening to the things happening in the world around me. Like a lot of writers, I'm usually the quiet person in the back of the room, not the life of the party. Everywhere I go, I watch people and observe how they react to the world around them. In New Orleans I used to love to ride the ferry back and forth across the Mississippi river, just to people-watch and to write in my notebook. Ideas can come from TV shows that don't end the way I want them to, stories my kids share with me about school, conversations at parties, a line in the newspaper, or from entries in my journal. And a lot of my ideas come from those scraps of paper I have tossed all over the house, in my purse, on the floor of my car, and tacked up on my bulletin board. Ideas are the easy part...it's the writing that makes all that hard work.

It's a long process, from thinking of the idea, to getting it all down on paper, and then finally, hopefully, seeing it in print. Even after a book is accepted, it can take quite a while for a publisher to actually bring it out. This is especially true for picture books, since the publisher doesn't start looking for an illustrator until after your book has been accepted. Then, and only then, does the illustrator begin to work on your book, and all those pictures. Most of the time, the illustrator has other work to finish first before they can start on your book, so it is not at all uncommon for a picture book to take two or three years to actually appear in print. Oh, and just in case you were wondering, beginning writers have no say in who illustrates their books.

Many books are rejected again and again before they are published, if ever. My first two easy readers were rejected 27 times before they sold. You have to have a healthy dose of perseverance and stubbornness to survive the writing business. Re-jections are a part of the business. Learn to roll with them and don't take them per-sonally. Pick yourself up and start over again. The more you write, the better you write.

How I write is just that, the way I write. If you find some ideas here that work for you, that's great. If you write in a completely different manner, that's great too. If you want to be a writer, the important thing is to write. And if you want to sell your writing, then you have to take your chances and submit your work to publishers. No one's going to come knocking on your door begging to see your latest novel. It's up to you to get it into the hands of those people who can help you bring your dreams to life.

Write on, right now!


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CREATIVE NONFICTION: A TRUE STORY WELL TOLD

by Susan Taylor Brown

If you want to teach young read¬ers about the Irish potato famine, the rain forest, or even math, tell them a story. Tell an interesting tale about interesting people doing interesting things and readers come back for more, sometimes not even realiz¬ing they are reading about something that really happened. This is creative nonfiction.

Creative nonfiction remains a nebulous term. Although the genre has been around the adult market for some time, only in recent years has it made inroads into chil-dren's publishing: Nonfiction has widened to use story-telling techniques usually as-soci¬ated with fiction to enliven, but remain true to, facts.

Carolyn Yoder, Senior Editor, History and World Cultures at Highlights for Children and their new imprint, Calkins Creek Books, explains: "The dif¬ference between straight nonfiction and creative nonfiction has to do with structure. Straight nonfic-tion relies solely on the parts—the facts for the most part—and not on the whole. Creative nonfiction is all about the whole—how the parts make it up. Creative non-fiction, like fiction, is all about story or theme. Creative nonfic¬tion tends to have strong char¬acters, strong sense of place, rich details, obvious themes, conflicts, arcs—everything."

Engaged Readers

"Storytelling is storytelling," says Reka Simonsen, Editor at Henry Holt and Com-pany. In nonfic¬tion, the story happens to be true rather than invented, but the same rules apply: There should still he a strong story arc; there still has to be a problem that needs resolution; the characters have to be fully developed; there must be mo-ments of dramatic tension and emotion of whatever kind appropriate to the events. Kids have to read quite a lot of books that are good for them—that is one of the main ways we educate our children in this soci¬ety. At its best, creative nonfic¬tion im-parts this necessary information in a way that captivates young readers, excites their imaginations, and sparks an interest in learning more."

To get kids to read, writers need to grab their interest right away and keep them turning pages.

"Good creative nonfiction helps kids learn to think by engaging their curios¬ity," says Shannon Barefield, Senior Edi¬tor at Lerner Publishing Group.

"It makes readers ask, `Then what hap¬pened? Why?' and so on. An engaged reader retains information and often goes on to seek more. Creative nonfic¬tion is of great use with reluctant and challenged readers, who may find their interest piqued, mak-ing the work of reading more rewarding than usual. Finally, storytelling techniques can bring to life a subject's significance in a way that just-the-facts writing can't al-ways do. It's crucial for kids to learn the nuts-and-bolts facts of the Holocaust, for example, but to learn the human side of those events is critically important as well. Creative nonfiction evokes the humanity within our history."

Literature of Fact

"I prefer to focus on the literature of fact," says Judy O'Malley, former Editori¬al Di-rector of Houghton Mifflin Books, "books that tell the shaped story of what is known about lives and times, and that include the documentation of those facts that model for young read¬ers how exciting authentic research can be. That leads them to read further and deeper, starting with the author's trail and following wherever their pas¬sion for the subject leads them. But, in essence, creative nonfiction is a good true story told well."

"Nonfiction is creative when it pres¬ents concepts or information in an entertaining manner," says Jean Reynolds, Publisher of The Millbrook Press, which is now looking for a new corporate buyer. Reynolds continues, "To use a cliched example, a good story about a kid running a lemonade stand can get across far more informa¬tion about supply and demand and free enterprise and competition than a straight expla-nation of economic con¬cepts ever could." On meeting the needs of today's readers, Reynolds says, "What reader wouldn't prefer to be entertained while learning the facts about something. Tests have shown that information is retained far better when presented in narrative form."

With story, even disagreeable historic characters come to life in a compelling fashion that makes us want to know more, as in the Robert F. Sibert Award-winner The Life and Death of Adolf Hitler, by James Cross Giblin, author of many creative nonfiction books. Giblin says, "Creative nonfiction is nonfiction that makes use of the following fiction techniques: (a) a dramatic opening, whether the piece is a magazine article or a chapter in a book; (b) an abundant use of involving scenes, not invented but shaped from the factual material that research has turned up; (c) an equally abun-dant use of dialogue drawn from letters, speeches, autobiographies, and other sources (but never made up!); and (d) a strong finish, if it's an article, and an end-ing with a hook that will draw readers onward if it's a chapter in a book. The aim in all this is to make the material as attractive and involving as possible for young readers while always hewing to the truth."

A Short History of Nonfiction

Simonsen explains the evolution of the category: "Nonfiction used to be a very dry genre. The books were thought of as instructional and were intended to be used in schools. The emphasis was on facts and scholarship, but not neces¬sarily on making the books appealing to a child reader. Then Dorling Kinder¬sley started their ex-tremely popular Eyewitness series, and the world of nonfiction changed. The Eyewit-ness books are big, glossy books with eye-catching photos and lots of interesting facts imparted in small tidbits rather than long chapters. Suddenly, nonfic¬tion was very popular (especially with boys), and it had a presence in book-stores, not just schools and libraries."

Simonsen continues, "Those illustrat¬ed nonfiction books were very popular for a long time, and many of the best of them still are, but at a certain point people began to get a little tired of the format. Maybe there were too many books like that, and peo-ple wanted something new. In any case, the genre began to change again. Some au-thors, artists, and publishers decided to try to make nonfiction books with the same approach that made their best fictional books so appealing to kids: interesting writ-ing with a lyrical or narrative style to hold the story together; gorgeous, artistic illus-trations that did not neces¬sarily have to be photorealistic; fasci¬nating, but perhaps lesser-known or more unique topics. These creative nonfiction books have generally been very well received by kids, educators, and bookstore buyers alike."

Barefield says, "It used to be acceptable and even expected for children's nonfiction books to contain fabricated material to make them more palatable. Some of those old fictional¬ized tales became accepted as fact, such as Parson Weems's famous story of George Washington and the cherry tree. Since then, standards have shifted. We want nonfiction to be entirely factual—but we want the infor¬mation presented in a way that brings it vividly to life. Flat, just-the-facts writ¬ing isn't good enough in many cases."

All Shapes & Sizes

O'Malley says, "Authors and publishers are continuing to experiment with new for-mats and approaches." She describes some of the more successful :

  • picture book biographies that focus on a particular incident in a sub¬ject's life or a short period of years and offer a window into the later life and accom-plishments of that individual;
  • poetry linked to factual prose on a topic to give a blending of intuitive and in-formative ways of knowing about something;
  • the use of primary documents—letters, maps, journal entries, public records—on the page to tell the story directly, much as it was experienced;
  • books that are open-ended, asking as many questions as they attempt to an-swer, demonstrating that we are con¬stantly expanding, re-assessing, and gaining new understanding of who we are and what we know, as our ways of collecting and accessing information become more advanced.

Many writers have embraced the idea of flexing their storytelling mus¬cles with crea-tive nonfiction.

"The ability to bring characters and events convincingly to life is as neces¬sary for, say, historical nonfiction as it is in a novel;' says Karen Wojtyla, Senior Editor of Margaret K. McElderry Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster Books for Young Read-ers. She cites the open¬ing of Jim Murphy's Inside the Alamo:

The town of San Antonio de Bexar lay silent and still. Most of its twenty-five hundred residents had already fled to the safety of ranches in the surrounding countryside... Suddenly, the grave stillness was shattered by the clanging warning hell, its harsh sound filling the air and racing along every twisting street, every narrow alley.

Now, that is good storytelling put to the aid of nonfiction," says Wojtyla.

Science and nature books are no longer the dry books many adults remember in their own childhoods. The enormous selection of creative nonfiction on these topics include such books as Laurence Pringle's An Extraordinary Life: The Story of a Mon-arch Butterfly.

"I could have written a straightfor¬ward nonfiction book about monarch butterflies," says Pringle, "what the caterpillars eat, the autumn migration, etc. Instead, I wrote about one caterpil¬lar who became one female adult try¬ing to get to Mexico, survive, then mate and reproduce in the spring. Many readers tell me they feel sad at the end of the book—at the end of the monarch's life. Some people cry—an unusual response to a nonfiction book, I believe.” The butterfly is not like Char¬lotte of Charlotte's Web: she does only what monarch butterflies do, or could do. The book is well-researched nonfic¬tion, but has a character whose life a reader follows, and cares about."

When Too Creative Fails

Writers are warned to not be too cre¬ative with weaving their stories, however. If you add characters, dialogue, invent scenes and alter facts, you moved to the realm of historical fic¬tion, a noble genre but still, fiction.

Reynolds cautions writers to be wary of being too creative. "The author who does not treat the genre with respect can easily convey erroneous impres¬sions. Creative non-fiction requires even more careful research than straight exposition, as so much more informa¬tion is being conveyed. It is the small details that the creative writer adds that bring texture and drama to an event, but it is not come by easily."

"If characters are added, scenes are imagined, dialogue is invented, this is now a fictional story based on real events, and as a reader, I want to know what actually happened and what may have happened," says O'Malley. "For me the cardinal rule is, 'Never lie: If you made up some of the elements, bring your reader into that process: Use an author's note to explain clearly what, why, and where,"

According to Yoder, “The problems that writers run into is when style overcomes everything else—and the story or theme suffers. You've painted a beautiful picture, but there's no real substance. This is especially true with history writing. Context and background suffer and the reader has no firm grounding,"

"One of the hardest things for many writers to do," says Simonsen, "seems to be getting the emotional aspects of a nonfiction topic across successfully. I've noticed that many authors try to carry the emotion with anthropomor¬phism or an abundance of exclamation points, rather than building the story in such a way that the natural drama of it comes through. Sometimes, the descriptive language is not as strong as it could be. I've found that nonfiction authors are more likely to use a simple, some-what familiar description rather than searching for a more evocative, unique way of saying the same thing."

Yoder adds, "Creative nonfiction lets the author come out. I want to see the author. I want to follow where the author is leading mc. So many times with history writing, the author feels that he or she has to be quiet, has to rely on the facts. The great history writer analyzes the facts, picks the rich anecdotes and details, and paints a pic¬ture. That's why I always ask authors to rely on the best resources, whether pri¬mary or secondary. Rich research can only lead to rich writing. It's as simple as that."

O'Malley sums it all up: “Though it's stimulating to share our thoughts about innova-tive formats as a commu¬nity devoted to children's literature, I think there is some danger in worrying more about terminology than about whether the style and form effectively communicate the ideas, spirit, and nature of the material, be it fiction or nonfiction. I would hope that every writer is always striving to make that modifier—creative—fully apply to his or her work, whether it's poetry, fic¬tion, nonfiction, humor or any other style of writing. Anything less is just not good enough for the young readers we serve."

For information about reprinting this article, please email reprints@susantaylorbrown.com


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WHY I WRITE:ONE WRITER'S STORY

by Susan Taylor Brown

If someone had told me back in the 7th grade that I'd grow up to be a writer, I would have laughed. See, I knew all about writers. Writers were complex and tal-ented people we studied in school. Writers usually lived in far-off places. And most of all, in my mind, writers were special, and I didn't feel special. I was just a lonely kid who talked to myself about places that didn't exist and people that no one else could see.

It wasn't that I didn't want to be a writer. I did. Desperately so. But I couldn't admit my desire to write to anyone but myself. I couldn't leave myself open to the criticism of friends and family and anyone else who might overhear my dreams.

And I was scared. Ever so scared of so many things. Of being different. Of not having any friends. Of not being good enough or pretty enough or smart enough. You name it, and I was probably afraid of it. I tried to hide it, holding my fears inside until they started to eat at me, truly, giving me anxiety attacks and constant stomach pains.

As a child I was terrified to go to sleep at night. After my mom tucked me in, I would lie awake, afraid to go to sleep. My vivid imagination conjured up all sorts of terrible things that might happen.

Was there a monster under my bed?
Maybe a dragon was hiding in my closet.
What was that noise I heard outside?
What if . . .?

I always seemed to imagine scary things, like monsters coming out of the light fix-ture over my bed, and me tucked in too tight to be able to get away. I tried to come up with happier thoughts.

What if I won a medal in a skating competition?
What if my mom bought me a new horse?
What if I was the long-lost daughter of someone famous, like a movie star?

Soon the game of “What If” became my friend. As I tried to fall asleep at night I be-gan to rewrite my favorite television shows, always making myself the long-lost daughter or sister of the star. As I got older, I learned to transfer the stories in my head to a blank sheet of paper, and my addiction to words became a daily habit. If I wasn't writing, then I was reading.

The more I read, the more I wrote — sometimes a poem, maybe a short story or a character sketch. Sometimes it was only a few lines scribbled on the back of a nap-kin to help me remember how I was feeling at a particular moment. Writing down my thoughts seemed to help the good times feel even better and the bad times not hurt so much. So I wrote and I wrote and I wrote. But the more I wrote, the less I fit in with the other kids. No one else heard voices in their head like I did. No one else saw pictures in their mind of faraway places. I didn't know anyone who would rather write about an adventure instead of watching one on TV.

I'm not like other kids, I thought. I'm strange. So I pushed my writing aside and tried to act like I thought I was supposed to. I went roller skating, rode my horse, took dance and piano lessons. I joined all the right clubs at school, but I never really belonged. I was trying to do the things I thought normal kids did. I still wanted to write. But I wanted to belong even more.

It wasn't until I had graduated from high school and was pushing a baby carriage around the block that a friend helped me understand the facts — who I was and what I wanted to do with my life were up to me. I had two children, a hard-working husband, a house in the country and I was able to stay home with my kids. By to-day's standards, I had it all, but I felt continually restless and unhappy. Denying your dreams can do that to you. During a visit, my friend asked, "If you could do anything you wanted, if you didn't have to worry about grocery shopping or paying the bills or cleaning the bathroom, what would you do all day? "

I guess my dream was closer to the surface than I realized. Without thinking I blurted out, "I'd write stories."

"Well, if that's what you want to do, why aren't you doing it?"

I thought it over and realized she was right. There was no reason for me not to fol-low my dream. I dug out all my treasured notebooks and scraps of paper. I read and reread what I thought were the world's greatest stories. I didn't have a clue what to do with them. I started to read books about writing, I took classes, and I studied the business. I learned that all those stories I had once found so magnificent weren't all that great after all. So I studied some more and I wrote some more. Every day my writing got a little better. I learned how to type, how to structure a story, and how to market it. And most of all, I learned about rejections slips.

For years I had a sign in my office that said, “Things Take Time.” I kept it there to remind me that nothing good ever comes without hard work.

I didn't sell the first story I ever wrote — or the second or the third. In fact, it took several years before I sold anything at all. It took even longer before I saw my first byline. And though my work continued to be rejected, it never occurred to me that I should quit writing just because I wasn't getting paid for it. The dream, finally al-lowed to surface, had become an obsession and a way of life for me, as necessary to my survival as breathing, eating, and sleeping.

I didn't just want to write, I had to write.

I had to write a poem about the way I felt when my grandfather died.

I had to write a story about the day I found the picture of my father — a father I have never met.

I have to write because with every book, story, and poem, I learn a little bit more about myself. And the more I learn about myself, the more I like me and the person

I've become. That's what keeps me going with my writing, even when books I write don't sell. I love learning about who I am. Each new discovery about myself is like a present waiting for me to open it. Now that I've stopped hiding from myself, I'm a lot happier, and a lot healthier, too.

When I was 12 years old, I wrote:
I live in constant fear of being discovered.
Fear of someone finding out that I'm just me, and nobody else.

At that time I was filled with too much insecurity to follow my dreams, too afraid of being different, and too much of a skeptic to believe that just being me would be enough. Now I know better.

Now I know that if you have a dream in life that is interesting and challenging you have to follow it. You can't live your life doing things that make other people happy unless they're also the things that make you happy. And if you don't fit into someone else's idea of what you should be, then maybe it's because you have your own ideas, and that's okay too.

Dare to dream. Dare to reach for the stars, and beyond.


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