A Short Ramble On Writing

By : Cent
Views : 356

My mind sometimes is a boiling cauldron of unbidden thoughts. I write because I have to. If I don't pen my thoughts I will never have peace of mind. The words haunt me, and scream to be put in ink on paper. It matters not if they are read by anyone. Take this as an example. I wrote this over four years ago and it has sat in my computer since.

Writing exorcises the demons that threaten to drive me mad. My head will explode if the words and thoughts aren't bled away occasionally in blue or black ink, which is the mind's blood, and the pus of the distended boil of a writer's brain. To write is to relieve the pressures within of a mind too active for its own good. Writing is the penicillin for a fevered mind.

I understand why a lot of writer's indulge in excessive drinking and drug usage. The words need to be silenced at times by the sweet blankness of the alcoholic blackout, the fantastic dreams, of nothing and everything, of the hallucinogen, the banishment of coherent thought in the opiate haze, all of which lead to the empty dreamless sleep of the passed out and unconscious state.

Writers are not artists as others claim, not in the true sense of art.

They are possessed of brains that contain too many thoughts, too many words, too much imagination, all this screaming for release from the tortured souls so possessed. It's not a boon, nor is it a blessing. It is a curse, which drives many mad, or into a life of drink and drugs for the succor of a thought and word free mind, and the simple dreams of a wordless baby.

One can never truly write the words which flood his or her brain. It's maddening, and impossible I feel. The words flit by too fast, and what appears on the page is always but a pale short-hand imitation of the words that ran through your mind. It's rarely even close to what you thought it would be. It’s like the scribblings of a four year old trying to transcribe Shakespeare being spoken aloud in the air around the child. The voice in your brain speaks the words too quickly, and you remember but bits and pieces of what it spoke to you. Only fragments are written of the epics displayed in your mind's eye, and heard by your mind's ear. It is all very frustrating at times, and no wonder it could possibly drive a person to drink.

Every story written is really a failure, some more so than others. You can never truly capture the full essence and dialogue you find in your head. The words are like a waterfall falling through a sieve, your brain, which you try to catch in a thimble (your writing skills). So much is lost, so little retained, and it never tastes as sweet as the waters you savored directly from the waterfall. It's enough to drive you insane.

Oh, but that there would come some clever inventive fellow some day, to build a machine to capture all those thoughts and words! What then the wonderful stories that could be told! Until this creative genius comes along and invents his machine a writer can only strive to be mediocre; to tell the tale to the best of his or her meager skill. Only the very best can capture that which is within their skulls, hearts, and souls, and bring it to the light of the written word complete as the writer envisioned it. Those that can do this are the geniuses, the true artisans of the word, showing the world the mirror which is the written language.

I wish that person, that scientist, inventor and tinkerer, would one day soon invent the skullcap mind-reading machine. It would save quite a few livers of some struggling frustrated writers. Either that, or a room full of talented secretaries to transcribe every word, every thought.

How do you other writers here feel? I’d love to hear what others here think and to read your comments on your thoughts about writing. WHY do you write?

Cent
(The Central Scrutinizer)

© Cent. All rights reserved by the author.


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Comments / Feedback

Mike
May 13, 2008, 12:27

Here are some comments that followed this piece when it was published over on our sister site www.planetwriters.com.
-------
Comments / Feedback
Dana
June 12, 2007, 19:17

"Every story written is really a failure, some more so than others. You can never truly capture the full essence and dialogue you find in your head."

Well, I am sympathetic to the notion and if we go from the generic back to the specific; that is--your head: that may (must) be so. But in my case I must resist making this idea an absolute. I feel that I many times capture what is in my head. The diamond I put on paper is the same diamond that was in my head. Call it luck, or serendipity, or talent the result is the same: I many times manage to recreate what was in my head. Maybe the thoughts in my head are simpler to translate, or maybe I am less critical of the result in prose, or maybe . . . I think my talent is able to make the translation from my head to the paper. I call it writing.

An addenda idea to this notion or point-of-view is the irrelevance of others criticizing what the writer has written (this is really only interesting regarding fiction). To use a sculptural example: if you have no idea what original idea was in Michaelangelo's head then how can you criticize the Pieta? It may be that the artist was able to translate from his head to marble 100%. You will never know and he can never prove it to you. You can only make a judgement about what is before you according to what is in your head. But you are not relevant. You are not a part of the process. You are not in the loop. You were not a part of the silver cord of creative consciousness that extended from animate to inanimate.
----------
chuckwoww
June 13, 2007, 07:14

Very well put Mike. The words and ideas come so fast it's hard to get them down, real life intervenes, things change, whatever gets written is an approximation. It's the best we can do.
---------
David
July 7, 2007, 08:31

Thaks Mike. I experience writing just as you do. My words fall on paper, as clay spun carefully yet never quite aquires the geometric form that I'd intended. Drives one nuts.
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mike
July 17, 2007, 04:06

David, Yes, I am the same. It bugs me, but the more I play around with it the worse it'll get, so I just let it ride the way it forms naturally, as adding too much to it seems to force it and it changes the feel of the story. Good to see you publishing your stories here. We hope to open the site to the public soon. We are almost where we feel we need to be to open the site for everyone to use.
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icarus
May 13, 2008, 19:03

Not me Mike. Everything is glacially slow. Each word I write seems to merit only oblivion. An internal censor I suppose.
steve rosse
May 13, 2008, 20:24

"Writers are not artists as others claim, not in the true sense of art."

Huh? Oh, Mike. We may come to blows over this.

First, what's art? Webster's chickens out and will commit only to "A skill acquired by experience or study," a definition which includes wiping your ass and that sure aint art. You can't get two artists to agree on a definition of what they do, but every artist worth his or her salt knows that art is more about what happens in the consumer's head than the producer's.

What you're defending above is the practice of keeping a journal. Some journals achieve the status of art but they do so out of happenstance; Anne Frank never intended to publish.

If writing does not provoke a response in the reader it's just masturbation. And masturbation is great; I do it every day. But nobody's going to pay to watch me.
Sean Bunzick
May 13, 2008, 20:48

I know exactly where you're coming from with this one, Mike. I go through it all the time whether it's here on Cape Cod, in my second home of Chiang Mai or even in odd-ball places like the few minutes I was determined to work on a manuscript in LAX while waiting for my China Air bird to Taipei. The mind is full of so many words, theories, thoughts, plots and you can never quite get them all down on paper in time. I often try but...
On the plus side, however, I must be honest and admit that when I'm doing the re-writing, the editing and the word-processing, this is where I can at least clean up the story and make it work better--at least for myself!
I can only say one last thing and it's something that infinitely superior writers like Stephen King and Chris Moore have said as well: no matter how many stories I write, I start out with an idea, a rough manuscript goal in mind but frankly, as weird and surreal as it might sound, once I start taking pen to paper, the damn books write themselves! It's incredible but I promise you it's nothing but the truth. And that reality does help make up for the problems you spoke of.
Keep writing, Mike; I know I will!
Marc Holt
May 13, 2008, 22:00

Sometimes I go to bed at night and the ideas are just whirling around in my brain. Often, this means I don't get any sleep at all until I get up again, power up the notebook, and bang out the story.

But the best experience is going to bed and then waking up at 3 am after dreaming the story. "Telephone Echoes" was written that way. I still feel it's one of my better stories. I woke up, wrote it in about 15 minutes, and only had to do a little editing in the morning.

Other times, I'll be doing something during the day and the urge comes on me. It's time to write. It doesn't matter if all hell is breaking loose. When the time is right it's time to write. It's kinda like sex. When you get the urge she'd better be ready!

Jago Turner
May 15, 2008, 00:17

Writing can be art; a skill acquired over a lifetime of studying and scribbling. It can be an opening of the veins. It can be the purest kind of confessional or the lowest kind of commercially viable trash. Those of us who write, whether we write articles or fiction or simply diaries, reflect ourselves in every single word. We give ourselves away if we show our work in public. If we raise ourselves from slut to whore we might even make a bit of money at it. Of course whether we give ourselves or sell ourselves we inevitably put our souls at the mercy of readers. The good readers bring our words to shining life. The bad ones merely prod at and poke our work before wandering off to do something requiring less concentration.
Victor
May 15, 2008, 07:31

Writing for me is a way to know myself and to have a fresh look at others in the light of my mind. Sometime it starts with an amorphous blob of emotions somewhere deep down which I could just feel, then one day like a sudden revelation that shapeless feeling starts assuming words, then a flow and a poem. Probably it takes a while for our mind to absorb and digest an event we experience and even after digesting it, it takes some time for those feelings to grow their roots in our subconscious layer. But the magic is one day when the process is complete suddenly either external or internal stimuli totally uncorrelated, evokes those feelings and a series of imagery not exactly what we had experienced before rather a processed version of it. But the whole experience of this process of crystallization of our deepest feelings into words is so intoxicating.
Mike
May 15, 2008, 12:14

We all as individuals approach the craft of writing in our own ways, although there are some similarities most have. Writing nonfiction for me is easy. Why? Because I already know the story and just need to search my memory banks for the details to flesh it out. The story is there already. I can knock out a few thousand word nonfiction story in an hour with little difficulty. Fiction on the other hand is quite difficult. A lot more work is required, research, making up the dialogue, imagining the story, devising believable characters and their interactions with each other, plot, timeline issues, background settings, etc., etc. It is why I have a lot of respect for a writer of fiction that can keep me engrossed and believing what is basically make-believe. Writing good fiction is a chore, fun, but a lot of work goes into it. But, saying that, I think of the two writing fiction is much more rewarding if you can get it right and make the reader suspend his disbelief and actually get into the tale you are spinning. That is the true 'art' of it to me. Nonfiction writing, to me (this is just my own opinion), is more of a craft, an ability to remember and having the tools/ability to write what you have experienced (or researched) into a story that shows the reader as much of the details pertinent to the story that one can remember.

The same goes for writing nonfiction one has researched and is relating 'second-hand' so to speak without having experienced it oneself. To me it is craftsmanship, the craft of writing, not so much an artform as a learned and practiced ability to use words like bricks laid into a strong well built wall. The artistry that enters into writing nonfiction I feel is the ability of some to be able to tell a good story (using facts) that was the basis for the spoken word stories of our ancestors before writing was invented. A gifted 'oral' storyteller can, I think, be a good and gifted nonfiction writer. The gift some have comes in varying degrees of course and a lot of it, the nonfiction writing, to me seems to base itself on 'just writing the story' over and over again, schooling in the craft of writing, having the basics as tools, and the will and urge to just write.

But for being 'art' I think mostly it is the great fiction writers that approach that level for the most part. Think of the best of the writers, those acclaimed and said to be the geniuses and 'artists' of this craft. How many of them were writing nonfiction? Most (I said most, not all)of those literary geniuses being acclaimed as true artists were writing fiction.
icarus
May 15, 2008, 13:38

I googled this unashamedly but it does give and idea of the sinuosity of the animal we are tangling with....


There's nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and open a vein. ~Walter Wellesley "Red" Smith


You must stay drunk on writing so reality cannot destroy you. ~Ray Bradbury


So often is the virgin sheet of paper more real than what one has to say, and so often one regrets having marred it. ~Harold Acton, Memoirs of an Aesthete, 1948


The role of a writer is not to say what we all can say, but what we are unable to say. ~Anaïs Nin


Writing is a socially acceptable form of schizophrenia. ~E.L. Doctorow


A word is not the same with one writer as with another. One tears it from his guts. The other pulls it out of his overcoat pocket. ~Charles Peguy


And by the way, everything in life is writable about if you have the outgoing guts to do it, and the imagination to improvise. The worst enemy to creativity is self-doubt. ~Sylvia Plath


I would hurl words into this darkness and wait for an echo, and if an echo sounded, no matter how faintly, I would send other words to tell, to march, to fight, to create a sense of hunger for life that gnaws in us all. ~Richard Wright, American Hunger, 1977


I try to leave out the parts that people skip. ~Elmore Leonard


If there's a book you really want to read, but it hasn't been written yet, then you must write it. ~Toni Morrison


What I like in a good author is not what he says, but what he whispers. ~Logan Pearsall Smith, "All Trivia," Afterthoughts, 1931


The act of putting pen to paper encourages pause for thought, this in turn makes us think more deeply about life, which helps us regain our equilibrium. ~Norbet Platt


It is necessary to write, if the days are not to slip emptily by. How else, indeed, to clap the net over the butterfly of the moment? For the moment passes, it is forgotten; the mood is gone; life itself is gone. That is where the writer scores over his fellows: he catches the changes of his mind on the hop. ~Vita Sackville-West


Writing became such a process of discovery that I couldn't wait to get to work in the morning: I wanted to know what I was going to say. ~Sharon O'Brien


Substitute "damn" every time you're inclined to write "very;" your editor will delete it and the writing will be just as it should be. ~Mark Twain


I'm not a very good writer, but I'm an excellent rewriter. ~James Michener


The time to begin writing an article is when you have finished it to your satisfaction. By that time you begin to clearly and logically perceive what it is you really want to say. ~Mark Twain


The wastebasket is a writer's best friend. ~Isaac Bashevis Singer


Don't be too harsh to these poems until they're typed. I always think typescript lends some sort of certainty: at least, if the things are bad then, they appear to be bad with conviction. ~Dylan Thomas, letter to Vernon Watkins, March 1938


Fill your paper with the breathings of your heart. ~William Wordsworth


The pages are still blank, but there is a miraculous feeling of the words being there, written in invisible ink and clamoring to become visible. ~Vladimir Nabakov


Don't tell me the moon is shining; show me the glint of light on broken glass. ~Anton Chekhov


Easy reading is damn hard writing. ~Nathaniel Hawthorne


Ink and paper are sometimes passionate lovers, oftentimes brother and sister, and occasionally mortal enemies. ~Emme Woodhull-Bäche


Metaphors have a way of holding the most truth in the least space. ~Orson Scott Card


A metaphor is like a simile. ~Author Unknown


The difference between the right word and the almost right word is the difference between lightning and a lightning bug. ~Mark Twain


The story I am writing exists, written in absolutely perfect fashion, some place, in the air. All I must do is find it, and copy it. ~Jules Renard, "Diary," February 1895


Proofread carefully to see if you any words out. ~Author Unknown


A writer is someone who can make a riddle out of an answer. ~Karl Kraus


A prose writer gets tired of writing prose, and wants to be a poet. So he begins every line with a capital letter, and keeps on writing prose. ~Samuel McChord Crothers, "Every Man's Natural Desire to Be Somebody Else," The Dame School of Experience, 1920


When once the itch of literature comes over a man, nothing can cure it but the scratching of a pen. But if you have not a pen, I suppose you must scratch any way you can. ~Samuel Lover, Handy Andy, 1842


I love writing. I love the swirl and swing of words as they tangle with human emotions. ~James Michener


If my doctor told me I had only six minutes to live, I wouldn't brood. I'd type a little faster. ~Isaac Asimov


I love being a writer. What I can't stand is the paperwork. ~Peter De Vries


Words - so innocent and powerless as they are, as standing in a dictionary, how potent for good and evil they become in the hands of one who knows how to combine them. ~Nathaniel Hawthorne


A critic can only review the book he has read, not the one which the writer wrote. ~Mignon McLaughlin, The Neurotic's Notebook, 1960


Writing, I think, is not apart from living. Writing is a kind of double living. The writer experiences everything twice. Once in reality and once in that mirror which waits always before or behind. ~Catherine Drinker Bowen, Atlantic, December 1957


To me, the greatest pleasure of writing is not what it's about, but the inner music the words make. ~Truman Capote, McCall's, November 1967


A writer and nothing else: a man alone in a room with the English language, trying to get human feelings right. ~John K. Hutchens, New York Herald Tribune, 10 September 1961


I am returning this otherwise good typing paper to you because someone has printed gibberish all over it and put your name at the top. ~English Professor (Name Unknown), Ohio University


Storytelling reveals meaning without committing the error of defining it. ~Hannah Arendt


It seems to me that the problem with diaries, and the reason that most of them are so boring, is that every day we vacillate between examining our hangnails and speculating on cosmic order. ~Ann Beattie, Picturing Will, 1989


For me, a page of good prose is where one hears the rain [and] the noise of battle. ~John Cheever


Do not put statements in the negative form.
And don't start sentences with a conjunction.
If you reread your work, you will find on rereading that a
great deal of repetition can be avoided by rereading and editing.
Never use a long word when a diminutive one will do.
Unqualified superlatives are the worst of all.
De-accession euphemisms.
If any word is improper at the end of a sentence, a linking verb is.
Avoid trendy locutions that sound flaky.
Last, but not least, avoid cliches like the plague.
~William Safire, "Great Rules of Writing"


No one means all he says, and yet very few say all they mean, for words are slippery and thought is viscous. ~Henry Brooks Adams, The Education of Henry Adams, 1907


Writing is easy: All you do is sit staring at a blank sheet of paper until drops of blood form on your forehead. ~Gene Fowler


Write down the thoughts of the moment. Those that come unsought for are commonly the most valuable. ~Francis Bacon


The expression "to write something down" suggests a descent of thought to the fingers whose movements immediately falsify it. ~William Gass, "Habitations of the Word," Kenyon Review, October 1984


Be obscure clearly. ~E.B. White


Everywhere I go I'm asked if I think the university stifles writers. My opinion is that they don't stifle enough of them. There's many a bestseller that could have been prevented by a good teacher. ~Flannery O'Connor


Being an author is like being in charge of your own personal insane asylum. ~Graycie Harmon


It seems to me that those songs that have been any good, I have nothing much to do with the writing of them. The words have just crawled down my sleeve and come out on the page. ~Joan Baez



When a man is in doubt about this or that in his writing, it will often guide him if he asks himself how it will tell a hundred years hence. ~Samuel Butler


Ink on paper is as beautiful to me as flowers on the mountains; God composes, why shouldn't we? ~Audra Foveo-Alba


Every great writer is a writer of history, let him treat on almost any subject he may. ~Walter Savage Landor, Imaginary Conversation: Diogenes and Plato


Let me walk through the fields of paper
touching with my wand
dry stems and stunted
butterflies....
~Denise Levertov, "A Walk through the Notebooks"


When we see a natural style we are quite amazed and delighted, because we expected to see an author and find a man. ~Blaise Pascal, Pensées, 1670


Every writer I know has trouble writing. ~Joseph Heller


Writer's block is a disease for which there is no cure, only respite. ~Laurie Wordholt


A synonym is a word you use when you can't spell the other one. ~Baltasar Gracián


When something can be read without effort, great effort has gone into its writing. ~Enrique Jardiel Poncela


I asked Ring Lardner the other day how he writes his short stories, and he said he wrote a few widely separated words or phrases on a piece of paper and then went back and filled in the spaces. ~Harold Ross


When you are describing,
A shape, or sound, or tint;
Don't state the matter plainly,
But put it in a hint;
And learn to look at all things,
With a sort of mental squint.
~Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (Lewis Carroll)


Writing comes more easily if you have something to say. ~Sholem Asch


The only cure for writer's block is insomnia. ~Merit Antares


The ablest writer is only a gardener first, and then a cook: his tasks are, carefully to select and cultivate his strongest and most nutritive thoughts; and when they are ripe, to dress them, wholesomely, and yet so that they may have a relish. ~Augustus William Hare and Julius Charles Hare, Guesses at Truth, by Two Brothers, 1827


If I don't write to empty my mind, I go mad. ~Lord Byron


I'd rather be caught holding up a bank than stealing so much as a two-word phrase from another writer. ~Jack Smith


An incurable itch for scribbling takes possession of many, and grows inveterate in their insane breasts. ~Juvenal, Satires


Writing is a struggle against silence. ~Carlos Fuentes


The process of writing has something infinite about it. Even though it is interrupted each night, it is one single notation. ~Elias Canetti


All my best thoughts were stolen by the ancients. ~Ralph Waldo Emerson


Every creator painfully experiences the chasm between his inner vision and its ultimate expression. The chasm is never completely bridged. We all have the conviction, perhaps illusory, that we have much more to say than appears on the paper. ~Isaac Bashevis Singer


One hates an author that's all author. ~George Gordon, Lord Byron, "Beppo"


What no wife of a writer can ever understand is that a writer is working when he's staring out of the window. ~Burton Rascoe


The best time for planning a book is while you're doing the dishes. ~Agatha Christie


An old racetrack joke reminds you that your program contains all the winners' names. I stare at my typewriter keys with the same thought. ~Mignon McLaughlin, The Neurotic's Notebook, 1960


Every word born of an inner necessity - writing must never be anything else. ~Etty Hillesum, quoted in Ten Fun Things to Do Before You Die by Karol Jackowski


A writer's mind seems to be situated partly in the solar plexus and partly in the head. ~Ethel Wilson


Publication - is the auction of the Mind of Man. ~Emily Dickinson


If you want to get rich from writing, write the sort of thing that's read by persons who move their lips when they're reading to themselves. ~Don Marquis


There are men that will make you books, and turn them loose into the world, with as much dispatch as they would do a dish of fritters. ~Miguel de Cervantes


Writers are not just people who sit down and write. They hazard themselves. Every time you compose a book your composition of yourself is at stake. ~E.L. Doctorow


The maker of a sentence launches out into the infinite and builds a road into Chaos and old Night, and is followed by those who hear him with something of wild, creative delight. ~Ralph Waldo Emerson


A perfectly healthy sentence, it is true, is extremely rare. For the most part we miss the hue and fragrance of the thought; as if we could be satisfied with the dews of the morning or evening without their colors, or the heavens without their azure. ~Henry David Thoreau


You write to communicate to the hearts and minds of others what's burning inside you. And we edit to let the fire show through the smoke. ~Arthur Polotnik


An editor is someone who separates the wheat from the chaff and then prints the chaff. ~Adlai Stevenson, as quoted in You Said a Mouthful edited by Ronald D. Fuchs


Most editors are failed writers - but so are most writers. ~T.S. Eliot


What would there be in a story of happiness? Only what prepares it, only what destroys it can be told. ~André Gide


Authors and lovers always suffer some infatuation, from which only absence can set them free. ~Samuel Johnson


Pen names are masks that allow us to unmask ourselves. ~C. Astrid Weber


A good style should show no signs of effort. What is written should seem a happy accident. ~W. Somerset Maugham, Summing Up, 1938


They lard their lean books with the fat of others' works. ~Robert Burton, Anatomy of Melancholy, 1621


My language is the common prostitute that I turn into a virgin. ~Karl Kraus


As to the adjective, when in doubt, strike it out. ~Mark Twain, Pudd'nhead Wilson, 1894


As for my next book, I am going to hold myself from writing it till I have it impending in me: grown heavy in my mind like a ripe pear; pendant, gravid, asking to be cut or it will fall. ~Virginia Woolf


I think it's bad to talk about one's present work, for it spoils something at the root of the creative act. It discharges the tension. ~Norman Mailer


To withdraw myself from myself has ever been my sole, my entire, my sincere motive in scribbling at all. ~Lord Byron


If I'm trying to sleep, the ideas won't stop. If I'm trying to write, there appears a barren nothingness. ~Carrie Latet


Words are but the vague shadows of the volumes we mean. Little audible links, they are, chaining together great inaudible feelings and purposes. ~Theodore Dreiser, 1900


It is the little writer rather than the great writer who seems never to quote, and the reason is that he is never really doing anything else. ~Havelock Ellis


The coroner will find ink in my veins and blood on my typewriter keys. ~C. Astrid Weber


Many books require no thought from those who read them, and for a very simple reason. They made no such demand upon those who wrote them. ~Charles Caleb Colton


Your manuscript is both good and original; but the part that is good is not original, and the part that is original is not good. ~Author Unknown, commonly misattributed to Samuel Johnson (*) (Thank you, Frank Lynch.)


How vain it is to sit down to write when you have not stood up to live. ~Henry David Thoreau, Journal, 19 August 1851


I am a man, and alive.... For this reason I am a novelist. And being a novelist, I consider myself superior to the saint, the scientist, the philosopher, and the poet, who are all great masters of different bits of man alive, but never get the whole hog. ~D.H. Lawrence, preface to Shestov, All Things Are Possible, 1938


Write your first draft with your heart. Re-write with your head. ~From the movie Finding Forrester


It is impossible to discourage the real writers - they don't give a damn what you say, they're going to write. ~Sinclair Lewis


Dancing in all its forms cannot be excluded from the curriculum of all noble education; dancing with the feet, with ideas, with words, and, need I add that one must also be able to dance with the pen? ~Friedrich Nietzsche


Writing is both mask and unveiling. ~E.B. White


Let's hope the institution of marriage survives its detractors, for without it there would be no more adultery and without adultery two thirds of our novelists would stand in line for unemployment checks. ~Peter S. Prescott


It's not plagiarism - I'm recycling words, as any good environmentally conscious writer would do. ~Uniek Swain


True Ease in Writing comes from Art, not Chance,
As those move easiest who have learn'd to dance.
~Alexander Pope, "An Essay on Criticism"


Writing is utter solitude, the descent into the cold abyss of oneself. ~Franz Kafka


An author in his book must be like God in the universe, present everywhere and visible nowhere. ~Gustave Flaubert


If I fall asleep with a pen in my hand, don't remove it - I might be writing in my dreams. ~Danzae Pace







There's only one person who needs a glass of water oftener than a small child tucked in for the night, and that's a writer sitting down to write. ~Mignon McLaughlin, The Second Neurotic's Notebook, 1966


One ought only to write when one leaves a piece of one's own flesh in the inkpot, each time one dips one's pen. ~Leo Tolstoy


A man will turn over half a library to make one book. ~Samuel Johnson


What things there are to write, if one could only write them! My mind is full of gleaming thought; gay moods and mysterious, moth-like meditations hover in my imagination, fanning their painted wings. But always the rarest, those streaked with azure and the deepest crimson, flutter away beyond my reach. ~Logan Pearsall Smith


No author dislikes to be edited as much as he dislikes not to be published. ~Russell Lynes


A story should have a beginning, a middle, and an end... but not necessarily in that order. ~Jean Luc Godard


Loafing is the most productive part of a writer's life. ~James Norman Hall


Whatever an author puts between the two covers of his book is public property; whatever of himself he does not put there is his private property, as much as if he had never written a word. ~Gail Hamilton


Sleep on your writing; take a walk over it; scrutinize it of a morning; review it of an afternoon; digest it after a meal; let it sleep in your drawer a twelvemonth; never venture a whisper about it to your friend, if he be an author especially. ~A. Bronson Alcott


The artist's only responsibility is his art. He will be completely ruthless if he is a good one.... If a writer has to rob his mother, he will not hesitate: The "Ode on a Grecian Urn" is worth any number of old ladies. ~Faulkner, quoted in M. Cowley, Writers at Work, 1958


A writer is somebody for whom writing is more difficult than it is for other people. ~Thomas Mann, Essays of Three Decades, 1947


The reason why many people are so fond of using superlatives, is, they are so positive that the poor positive is not half positive enough for them. ~Augustus William Hare and Julius Charles Hare, Guesses at Truth, by Two Brothers, 1827


Sit down, and put down everything that comes into your head and then you're a writer. But an author is one who can judge his own stuff's worth, without pity, and destroy most of it. ~Colette, Casual Chance, 1964


Writing is a way of talking without being interrupted. ~Jules Renard, Journal, 10 April 1895


The good writers touch life often. The mediocre ones run a quick hand over her. The bad ones rape her and leave her for the flies. ~Ray Bradbury


Being an author is having angels whisper in your ear - and devils, too. ~Graycie Harmon


Authorship is exhibitionism, and readers a species of voyeur. ~Carrie Latet


Without a pen I feel naked, but it's writing that is my exhibitionism. ~Carrie Latet


Having imagination, it takes you an hour to write a paragraph that, if you were unimaginative, would take you only a minute. Or you might not write the paragraph at all. ~Franklin P. Adams, Half a Loaf, 1927


You could compile the worst book in the world entirely out of selected passages from the best writers in the world. ~G.K. Chesterton


The most beautiful things are those that madness prompts and reason writes. ~André Gide, Journals, 1894


Life can't ever really defeat a writer who is in love with writing, for life itself is a writer's lover until death - fascinating, cruel, lavish, warm, cold, treacherous, constant. ~Edna Ferber, A Kind of Magic, 1963


The writer writes in order to teach himself, to understand himself, to satisfy himself; the publishing of his ideas, though it brings gratification, is a curious anticlimax. ~Alfred Kazin, Think, February 1963


i never think at all when i write
nobody can do two things at the same time
and do them both well
~Don Marquis, Archy's Life of Mehitabel, 1933


Our passions shape our books; repose writes them in the intervals. ~Proust, The Past Recaptured, 1927


I keep little notepads all over the place to write down ideas as soon as they strike, but the ones that fill up the quickest are always the ones at my nightstand. ~Emily Logan Decens


I even shower with my pen, in case any ideas drip out of the waterhead. ~Graycie Harmon


Read over your compositions, and when you meet a passage which you think is particularly fine, strike it out. ~Samuel Johnson, "Recalling the Advice of a College Tutor," Boswell, Life of Johnson, 1791


A notepad by the bedside accounts for half the earnings of my livelihood. If it weren't for bedtime, half my novels would still be stuck at dock. -Ever Garrison


An original writer is not one who imitates nobody, but one whom nobody can imitate. ~Chateaubriand, Le Génie du Christianisme, 1802


Keep a diary and one day it'll keep you. ~Mae West


Imitation is the highest form of pissing me off. Quit stealing my content and violating my copyright. ~Jen T. Verbumessor


The good writing of any age has always been the product of someone's neurosis, and we'd have a mighty dull literature if all the writers that came along were a bunch of happy chuckleheads. ~William Styron, interview, Writers at Work, 1958


There is no royal path to good writing; and such paths as do exist do not lead through neat critical gardens, various as they are, but through the jungles of self, the world, and of craft. ~Jessamyn West, Saturday Review, 21 September 1957


I do not like to write - I like to have written. ~Gloria Steinem


Writing a book is a horrible, exhausting struggle, like a long bout of some painful illness. One would never undertake such a thing if one were not driven on by some demon whom one can neither resist nor understand. ~George Orwell, "Why I Write," 1947 (Thanks, Jennifer)


One must be drenched in words, literally soaked in them, to have the right ones form themselves into the proper pattern at the right moment. ~Hart Crane


Writers are just people who have a whole lot on the inside that they need to get to the outside, with pen and paper as their preferred method of transport. Same with dancers, artists, and singers - all the same urges with differing transportation. ~Graycie Harmon


He that uses many words for the explaining any subject doth, like the cuttlefish, hide himself for the most part in his own ink. ~John Ray


Writing is a product of silence. ~Carrie Latet


A good novel tells us the truth about its hero; but a bad novel tells us the truth about its author. ~G.K. Chesterton


Novelists... fashioning nets to sustain and support the reader as he falls helplessly through the chaos of his own existence. ~Fay Weldon


Find out the reason that commands you to write; see whether it has spread its roots into the very depth of your heart; confess to yourself you would have to die if you were forbidden to write. ~Rainer Maria Rilke


Books want to be born: I never make them. They come to me and insist on being written, and on being such and such. ~Samuel Butler


It took me fifteen years to discover I had no talent for writing, but I couldn't give it up because by that time I was too famous. ~Robert Benchley


No man should ever publish a book until he has first read it to a woman. ~Van Wyck Brooks


The most essential gift for a good writer is a built-in, shockproof **** detector. This is the writer's radar and all great writers have had it. ~Ernest Hemingway, interview in Paris Review, Spring 1958


The two most engaging powers of an author are to make new things familiar and familiar things new. ~Samuel Johnson


The best style is the style you don't notice. ~Somerset Maugham


There are thousands of thoughts lying within a man that he does not know till he takes up the pen and writes. ~William Makepeace Thackeray


I want to write books that unlock the traffic jam in everybody's head. ~John Updike


Drama, instead of telling us the whole of a man's life, must place him in such a situation, tie such a knot, that when it is untied, the whole man is visible. ~Leo Tolstoy


Every author in some way portrays himself in his works, even if it be against his will. ~Goethe


Cent
May 15, 2008, 14:15

Thanks Icarus. There are some great ones in there, and all so very true. Yes, the subject is a slippery one, and each writer will have his own opinions on it, but what fun it can be for a writer to discuss it all with like-minded men and women who are possessed by the same urge to put words on paper. I feel there is a ton of ego behind each and every writer. How else can we explain the fact that all writers feel they have something to offer that others would want to read, and even pay to do so? Thanks for that list of quotes, a few of them really hit home.
Bill
May 15, 2008, 14:21

‘Sometimes I go to bed at night and the ideas are just whirling around in my brain. Often, this means I don't get any sleep at all until I get up again, power up the notebook, and bang out the story.’

I know what you mean Marc, It's a heartbreaking moment when your alarm clock goes off and you haven't been to bed yet.
Jago Turner
May 15, 2008, 18:53

I would question the distinction made between fiction and non fiction made by Mike here.

Fiction is hard work. Keeping the story going. Keeping it together. Bringing what is not alive alive in the mind of the reader. Few people can do it well and for that reason it does require an incredible degree of concentration and skill. I can ony admire those who have the kind of mental discipline and imagination to write novels of pure invention.

Similarly well researched non-fiction is beyond my imagining. It requires a degree of faith in a primary source or another secondary source and the ability to immerse yourself in such research to the degree that it feels like reality. I don't know how people do this. As a solipsist I would always suspect my sources of lying.

But to represent reality as you experienced it and not clouded by the fog of wishful recollection or ego; I would suggest that is harder work than either of the above. To find the reality that lies under the rubble of adapted memory and to represent it with so much sensual reality that the reader can taste it and feel himself living inside another mind is an art I would not be so eager to write off as a lesser form. Many of our finest writers choose to hide themselves within a fictionalised reality. The names have been altered to protect those with something to hide (and we all have something to hide).

I'm not suggesting that flights of fantasy or tales of the future are lesser works (as many critics often do).

Neither am I suggesting that Shakespeare's reputation would be improved if every play he wrote was about the escapades of a debt ridden playwright estranged from his wife and children.

Sometimes, however, I have to admit that as a reader I get frustrated with books where the author is basing his work on researched locations rather than places he has been. I grow frustrated with characters based upon laboured archetypes rather than individuals the author has encountered. I get bored when I know the author started his work with his ending in place and that I'm merely turning the pages of a novel to arrive at a clearly signposted destination.

When it comes to writing short stories it is infinitely easier to make something up than to accurately remember something which happened a decade previously. I have an alias who makes up stories. He writes much quicker than I do.

Of course Nathanial Hawthorne is right... "Easy reading is damn hard writing" but telling the truth and making it readable while not losing the truth of it is much harder than making stuff up.

steve rosse
May 15, 2008, 19:01

"what fun it can be for a writer to discuss it all with like-minded men and women"

There are women here?
Korski
May 15, 2008, 19:11

All this talk about writing is way way too high falutin for me. And way too full of self-indulgence. Why do I write? I've got a story to tell, maybe good, maybe bad, and want to share it with a few people. I've found out something interesting, I think, and want to share it. I've got some personal thoughts and want to see them on paper and know that in a couple of days no one will give a damn about any of it. I think people who want to fly with the angels about why they write, or why they think it is so important, would be much better off trying to put together a good story and share it with a few friends. And then go have a good meal, a drink or two, and a good shag. Frankly, most of this talk about writing strikes me as sophomoric, just plain silly.
icarus
May 15, 2008, 20:16

Korski: That would appear to nudge you into the Hemingway camp.....
bkksw
May 16, 2008, 00:04

Writing stories you enjoy, for the public, is nothing more than another form of exhibitionism..

Writing stories for newspapers and magazines, is noting more than another form of prostitution..

Writing while at work.. for your work.. is like.. well.. being married.. you've gotta do it every one in a while..

Sometimes I take my clothes off, grab the notebook, and sit naked 200 feet off the ground comforted only by the gentle warmth of a depleting laptop battery.. come up with my best stuff that way.. :)
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