Showing posts with label Jane Smiley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jane Smiley. Show all posts

Friday, 29 May 2015

WRITING TIPS – PART 7 FROM EDGE WRITER SAVITA KALHAN


For the past six weeks the Edge Writers have been sharing their writing tips. Here’s a brief run-down, but to get the full benefit of their wisdom, check out their blogs here on The Edge:



Bryony Pearce – Go be a DORK – as in Day-dream, Observe, Read, and Query, and most importantly to then Write.

Dave Cousins – Amongst his fifteen amazing writing tips, one of the most important is to ENJOY what you’re writing.

Katie Dale – People watch, listen, carry a notebook, enter writing competitions, and READ, READ, READ.




Miriam Halahmy – When you’re drained, take a complete break and do no writing at all until you’ve recharged your batteries. It’s a risk well worth taking.






Paula Rawsthorne - My tip would be to gather tips and ‘rules’ from the various writers that you admire (and some you don’t) and then see what works for you.




Sara Grant - My top writing tip – Buy LOTS AND LOTS of great books – and study them! The only creative writing teachers you will ever need are on bookstore and library shelves.






And now it’s my turn to share mine. Last year I blogged about Pulitzer Prize winner Jane Smiley. “Nobody asked you to write that novel.” These words were said to her by a friend and they resonated with her in a way that they resonate with many writers, and have done so for me.



Writing is such a close and personal encounter with your imagination that to lay it out in the open for others to read, criticise, and, hopefully, enjoy is a major deal. But that’s what writers do. So bearing that in mind, I have only two writing tips to add to all the other great tips from the Edge authors.


Enjoy the process of writing regardless of the rewards. Don’t think about whether those rewards might involve getting a publishing contract, winning awards, receiving accolades, getting big advances, because you may be in for troubling times. The writing process itself can be hard work, all the more harder if you’re not enjoying what you’re writing, trying to write or rewriting for the seventh time!

Be patient and persevere. Being a writer also means being in for the long haul. The publishing industry is nothing if not slow and long-winded. Nothing happens today or tomorrow; nothing happens without several people in a publishing department being totally committed to your book, and then they have to get it past several other people in other departments such as Sales and Marketing. So bide your time and don't ever give up.

We hope you’ve all enjoyed our WRITING TIPS series. Please do come back to us if you have any questions or leave us your thoughts in the comments section below. 
HAPPY WRITING FROM THE EDGE!

 

 

Friday, 7 November 2014

"Nobody asked you to write that novel," by Savita Kalhan



Nobody asked you to write that novel.”

Those were the words of one of Jane Smiley’s friends. These words resonated with her the way, I think, they resonate with many writers.

When I read these words in an interview with Jane Smiley, I thought: I must pin these up on the wall where I can see them every day when I’m working, especially when I’m stuck, frustrated, or blocked in the current WIP. Because they are so true – nobody has asked me to write this current book. Nobody. I made that choice all by myself. I signed up for it without any prodding or persuading on anyone else’s parts but my own. But those words are a good reminder when the book isn’t going exactly the way you want or expect it to, and when it doesn’t seem to be going anywhere at all!



Moo, The Greenlanders and A Thousand Acres, for which she won the Pulitzer prize, are just a small selection of books by Jane Smiley. She’s been shortlisted for the Orange Prize, written short stories, written for young adults, written crime, historical, epics, as well as essays and non-fiction. In her interview, she offered five tips to writers, which are not dissimilar to the tips I would offer. Every so often it’s good to step back from the writing process to not only remind yourself of why you’re writing but also to remind yourself of the world beyond your manuscript.




So, be a tortoise not a hare, Smiley says. Let the story evolve rather than rushing through the first draft. It’s not a competition as to how fast you can write. This one is easily forgotten in the rush to get the story down as fast as possible. For some writers it works, but for many it doesn’t.





Read a lot. We all know that this is so important, and for many writers it’s what led us to trying our hand at writing in the first place. Reading is important not just for the sheer pleasure of it, but it also makes us aware of the way different writers have crafted their novels, of what’s possible and works.

Look and listen. I’ve often been accused by my family of ‘zoning out’ when we’re out, but they all know that what I’m doing is eavesdropping! Characters in a book are built on the people we know and read about, but also on the people we see and hear, or overhear.

Exhaust your own curiosity about your project before showing it to someone else. I have in the past rushed to show someone a first draft, but over the years I’ve realised that it’s a mistake for me to do that. I need some space and distance between each draft so that I can get some perspective on the manuscript. When I do have the manuscript read by someone else, I’m usually ready, albeit somewhat anxiously, for an honest critique and constructive criticism.

Focus on enjoying the process. This is so important, and, most of the time, I love the writing process – why else would I do it? The rewards? Well, I’ve come to realise that if I thought only about any rewards, then I may well be in danger of living a life of permanent disappointment.  But then how does one persevere? It’s hard to continue writing day in day out without sight of some reward at the end of it. Which is why, I suppose, if I didn’t love the process of writing, I would eventually stop writing altogether.

Jane Smiley's book, Thirteen Ways of Looking at the Novel, promises to be an interesting read. She wrote the book to help her overcome her block. She set out to read and review a 100 books. With each book she talks about why it succeeds as a novel, or doesn't, and discusses her own work, offering tips and advice.


What keeps you going as a writer?