Anonymous wrote:I’ll bite. I’m taking a brain break from writing (on deadline) to be with you on DCUM. So if you’re interested in a glimpse of the glamorous writing life, I’m Exhibit A, toiling past midnight Don’t ask me to compute my “hourly rate.” I do love what I do. It’s a labor of love. Or maybe it’s just a labor. Sometimes it makes me want to pull out my eyelashes and hurl my computer across the room. I’m not sure there’s any “best” or “right” (or “write?”) path to becoming a writer. I write nonfiction books and essays that draw on my specific area of expertise. So for me, “becoming a writer” actually meant “training to do something else.” I subscribe to the adage, “write what you know.” (But make it funnier and smarter and anchor it with stories to make it memorable.) When you pitch, editors are going to want to know three things: why now, why you, and who is your audience. If you want to publish what you write, you’re going to need to figure out the answer to those questions. In the meantime, keep a journal, or jot down notes in a google doc. You’re a writer when you start writing. As one last cautionary note, if you do publish, know that the “comments section” might obliterate those nice feelings you’ve been carrying all these years about your potential. I’m not telling you this to dissuade you from writing; I’m telling you this to dissuade you from reading the comments.
Anonymous wrote:1. Pick up The Artist’s Way and work through the program. I promise, by the end you’ll know exactly what you want to write.
2. Get comfortable with the drafting process. First drafts are always sh!tty. That’s okay. Sh!tty first drafts lead to good second drafts and fantastic third drafts.
Write the thing you want to write. Then rewrite it from scratch. Then rewrite it from scratch a third time. This is different than editing, you start the entire thing over each time.
Expensive creative writing programs are basically this - they just tell you to keep rewriting it. Save your money on courses and just keep drafting.
For books, I like Dreyer’s English and Consider This by Chuck Pahlanuk (the author of fight club).
Anonymous wrote:OP, real writers who actually make a living off of it aren't wasting their time writing on DCUM. But I'm sure you're about to get lots of responses from pompous posters anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Start a blog, like the 10 million that are out there, and see if you get any traction.
Post all the college papers and Dave Barry-esque emails that people seem to rave about and kept telling you pursue writing.
Aren't blogs a thing of the past now?
Anonymous wrote:OP, consider this: Instead of people criticizing your work imagine that no one will ever read it.
With the advent of the internet, writing became ubiquitous. Virtually everyone is a writer now.
The only way to write is as though it won't be read.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ll bite. I’m taking a brain break from writing (on deadline) to be with you on DCUM. So if you’re interested in a glimpse of the glamorous writing life, I’m Exhibit A, toiling past midnight Don’t ask me to compute my “hourly rate.” I do love what I do. It’s a labor of love. Or maybe it’s just a labor. Sometimes it makes me want to pull out my eyelashes and hurl my computer across the room. I’m not sure there’s any “best” or “right” (or “write?”) path to becoming a writer. I write nonfiction books and essays that draw on my specific area of expertise. So for me, “becoming a writer” actually meant “training to do something else.” I subscribe to the adage, “write what you know.” (But make it funnier and smarter and anchor it with stories to make it memorable.) When you pitch, editors are going to want to know three things: why now, why you, and who is your audience. If you want to publish what you write, you’re going to need to figure out the answer to those questions. In the meantime, keep a journal, or jot down notes in a google doc. You’re a writer when you start writing. As one last cautionary note, if you do publish, know that the “comments section” might obliterate those nice feelings you’ve been carrying all these years about your potential. I’m not telling you this to dissuade you from writing; I’m telling you this to dissuade you from reading the comments.
I’m not the OP, but people have also told me to “become a writer.” I was a trade journalist back in the day. But today, it’s the idea of unfiltered feedback from, well, everybody, that holds me back from trying to publish. I don’t think I have a thick enough skin for that (and I’m used to having my work chewed up by editors - that doesn’t bother me). I also think I lack the discipline to avoid reading the comments!
Anonymous wrote:I’ll bite. I’m taking a brain break from writing (on deadline) to be with you on DCUM. So if you’re interested in a glimpse of the glamorous writing life, I’m Exhibit A, toiling past midnight Don’t ask me to compute my “hourly rate.” I do love what I do. It’s a labor of love. Or maybe it’s just a labor. Sometimes it makes me want to pull out my eyelashes and hurl my computer across the room. I’m not sure there’s any “best” or “right” (or “write?”) path to becoming a writer. I write nonfiction books and essays that draw on my specific area of expertise. So for me, “becoming a writer” actually meant “training to do something else.” I subscribe to the adage, “write what you know.” (But make it funnier and smarter and anchor it with stories to make it memorable.) When you pitch, editors are going to want to know three things: why now, why you, and who is your audience. If you want to publish what you write, you’re going to need to figure out the answer to those questions. In the meantime, keep a journal, or jot down notes in a google doc. You’re a writer when you start writing. As one last cautionary note, if you do publish, know that the “comments section” might obliterate those nice feelings you’ve been carrying all these years about your potential. I’m not telling you this to dissuade you from writing; I’m telling you this to dissuade you from reading the comments.