1-Abandon the idea that you are
ever going to finish. Lose track of the 400 pages and write just one page for
each day, it helps. Then when it gets finished, you are always surprised.
2-Write freely and as rapidly as
possible and throw the whole thing on paper. Never correct or rewrite until the
whole thing is down. Rewrite in process is usually found to be an excuse for
not going on. It also interferes with flow and rhythm which can only come from
a kind of unconscious association with the material.
3-Forget your generalized audience.
In the first place, the nameless, faceless audience will scare you to death and
in the second place, unlike the theater, it doesn’t exist. In writing, your
audience is one single reader. I have found that sometimes it helps to pick out
one person—a real person you know, or an imagined person and write to that one.
4-If a scene or a section gets the
better of you and you still think you want it—bypass it and go on. When you
have finished the whole you can come back to it and then you may find that the
reason it gave trouble is because it didn’t belong there.
5-Beware of a scene that becomes
too dear to you, dearer than the rest. It will usually be found that it is out
of drawing.
6-If you are using dialogue—say it
aloud as you write it. Only then will it have the sound of speech.
But perhaps most paradoxically
yet poetically, twelve years prior — in 1963, immediately after receiving the
Nobel Prize in Literature “for his realistic and imaginative writings,
combining as they do sympathetic humour and keen social perception” — Steinbeck
issued a thoughtful disclaimer to all such advice:
If there is a magic in story
writing, and I am convinced there is, no one has ever been able to reduce it to
a recipe that can be passed from one person to another. The formula seems to
lie solely in the aching urge of the writer to convey something he feels
important to the reader. If the writer has that urge, he may sometimes, but by
no means always, find the way to do it. You must perceive the excellence that
makes a good story good or the errors that makes a bad story. For a bad story
is only an ineffective story.”
Steinbeck is one of my favourite authors and his advice given years ago in an Paris Review interview is as valid today as it ever was.
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