By Indie Authors for Indie Authors.

Tag: writing advice (Page 2 of 3)

Writing Advice from Famous Authors: John Hodgman

  1. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: Ta-Nehisi Coates
  2. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: Ian McEwan
  3. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: Christopher Hitchens
  4. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: Anne Rice
  5. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: John Hodgman
  6. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: SLCC
  7. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: Ray Bradbury

John Hodgkin Writing Advice

 

Our next installment of Writing Advice from Famous Authors comes from the smart, witty, and hilarious John Hodgman. You may have seen Hodgman’s work on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart or heard his very funny podcast Judge John Hodgman. If you haven’t, then at the very least, you know him as PC in Apple’s “Get a Mac” advertising campaign back in in 2006. You have probably also seen his writing on countless shows and didn’t even know it.

In addition to television and podcast work, Hodgman has had stories featured in McSweeney’s, The Paris Review, One Story, and The New York Times. He currently has three books available: The Areas of My Expertise (2006), More Information Than You Require (2009), and That Is All (2012).

 

Here is John Hodgman in 2013:

 

 

“People who keep submitting, and keep doing it, and keep making are statiscally much more likely to be successful than the people that are just merely super talented.'”

This advice is spot on. I recall a time about 10 years ago when a close friend of mine was worried about “making it” in his chosen profession. I explained to him that he has a huge leg up because he’s not crazy and he’s educated. That puts him at a huge advantage from the get go. Now just work harder than his peers and he’ll be just fine, which is even easier since many of our peer group seem to recoil from hard work.

Although I don’t think of myself as one, I’m right at that first year of where people say millennials begin. There are a lot of stereotypes about millennials, but stereotypes are stereotypes for a reason. I have found many 20-somethings and 30-somethings are afraid to put in the effort required day-in and day-out. That means if you are willing to do that work, you’re at a distinct advantage to be successful. Even if you’re an author in your 40s, 50s, 60s, or even 70s, you still have a distinct advantage if you’re willing to work harder and persevere longer than the next writer.

Hodgman’s advice here sounds strikingly similar to advice we heard from Ta-Nehisi Coates in our first Writing Advice from Famous Authors from last August where he voiced how much he believed writing is about perseverance. Keep working hard; keep writing. If you want to be a successful writer, work harder and write more.

 

 

thnkr graph

John Hodgman’s chart on how to be a successful writer.

 

 

You already have a leg up on the crazy people and most super talented people (the geniuses) won’t work as hard as you, that leaves you competing with the Medium to Low Talented people. Work harder and work more often than them.

“It’s not enough to write what you know. You have to know interesting things.”

This is a great line. On display with this line is some of Hodgman’s trademark wit. The truth contained within this sentence is that if you want to be a successful writer, you have to continue to experience life. No one wants to read about how you watched the latest episode of This is Us. That’s not interesting.

 

It's not enough to write what you know. You have to know interesting things. -John HodgmanClick To Tweet

 

 

“You also have to know what you know, and I think that’s even the hardest thing.”

I was really struck by this. It sounds obvious, but it’s in fact very complex. Most people don’t actually know what they think they know. They haven’t examined their experiences and their beliefs enough. As a writer, you need to really go to the heart of the matter and challenge those things that you know. That’s when the written word becomes interesting.

I am reminded of the famous line from Socrates at the trial for his life (from Plato’s Apology): “The unexamined life is not worth living.”

As writer’s, we have to examine everything, and then once we’ve finished examining them, challenge what we’ve come to know to be true.

 

 

“You have to know what it is that is driving you to do this completely narcissistic and asocial act of creating.”

This is another sentence that puts Hogdman’s wit and humor on display. There’s always truth in his comedy, though.

The comedy, in my mind, is labeling the writer as narcissistic and asocial. Any writer can identify with the humor in that.

The truth, however, is the need to understand what is driving you to write in the first place.

It doesn’t have to be only one thing, and it doesn’t have to be the exact same thing year-in and year-out, but you should always know what that thing that’s driving you is at any given point in time. If you don’t, you’ll become lost in your writing efforts. If you don’t know what’s driving you to write, you will fail to work harder than the next person and put your success in jeopardy.

Find more writing and publishing tips at Nothing Any Good.

 

Writing Advice from Famous Authors: Anne Rice

  1. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: Ta-Nehisi Coates
  2. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: Ian McEwan
  3. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: Christopher Hitchens
  4. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: Anne Rice
  5. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: John Hodgman
  6. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: SLCC
  7. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: Ray Bradbury

Anne Rice writing advice

 

In our fourth edition of Writing Advice from Famous Authors, we bask in the writerly wisdom that Anne Rice has to offer. If you don’t know Anne Rice—and even if you think you don’t, you still probably know of her—she is a fascinating author, and quite a successful one at that. Here’s how her wikipedia page describes her writing: “[Rice] is an American author of gothic fiction, Christian literature, and erotica.”

Wait, what? Yep, she has published books in all three of those genres. Brilliant.

Anne Rice may be best known for her debut novel Interview With the Vampirea book that was rejected time and again for three years before finally seeing the light of day and getting published in 1976. It went on to become a bestseller. Any of you out there that are feeling down because of all the rejections we hear as writers, know that even some of the great books and great authors have walked the same plight. one of the best traits a writer can have is perseverance.

Rice also wrote the bestselling Exit to Edenanother book adapted to become a major motion picture, under the pseudonym Anne Rampling. She has sold nearly 100 million copies of her books, making her one of the most successful American authors in recent history. Needless to say, we can probably learn a thing or two from her about writing.

Here is Anne Rice in 2012. The video is a little long in the tooth, but there is some excellent advice to be gleaned.

 

 

“Write. What makes a writer is writing.”

If you’re a long time reader of Nothing Any Good, you know that this is probably the main tenant I wish for everyone to take away from here. Write.

Yes, review, read, edit, learn, ask questions, and on and on, but it’s all a waste of time if you don’t actually write. The best way to learn how to become a better writer is to write. It’s the Malcolm Gladwell 10,000-hour rule. Write as much as you can!

Rice goes on to say, “Writing to a person like me and asking for advice is, in a way, a waste of time.”

Harsh, but true. Asking for writing advice is, often times, a form of procrastination. We all do it. We all have clever ways to feel like we’re working when we’re not in fact writing. Asking for writing advice is one of them.

 

'Write. What makes a writer is writing.' - Anne Rice #writerslife #amwritingClick To Tweet

 

“Kick out the pages everyday…and save them.'”

This is important advice. For a brand new writer, it’s probably second nature to save your pages. You haven’t written very much at all, so the pages you have written are precious. You would never dream of tossing them out, (or deleting them from your computer).

For the more seasoned writer, you know that there are days or weeks or even months where you feel everything you write is garbage. You just hate what you’re churning out. Don’t delete it.

Resist the impulse to chuck it and start anew. You never know when it will become worthwhile again. It may not be useful for the manuscript on which you’re currently working, but at some point, maybe years down the line, you may find that it sparks new life into your writing and is quite valuable indeed.

 

“Every year somebody makes it to the bestseller list who started out…in their bedroom writing late at night.”

Never forget this. It’s good to have dreams. Again, one of the greatest traits of a successful writer is perseverance.

 

“The publishing world today is crying for new voices, new visions, new stories, new characters.”

I find that quite often Indie Authors are trying to emulate another author’s voice. Reading a lot is great. Gleaning writing tactics from other successful authors is advisable. Trying to copy another author’s voice, however, is a surefire way to waste everyone’s time.

As Rice says, nobody wants “somebody that sounds just like Anne Rice, or Stephen King, or Oscar Wilde, or Danielle Steele. They want an original voice.”

Find your voice. Become your own author. Don’t copy someone else in order to try and “make it.” You’ll fail. Trust me, you’ll fail. Readers don’t want a copycat.

 

“Go where the pain is.”

I love this. This is wonderful advice. It’s something that we should probably follow in our daily lives as well, but certainly as writers. We avoid pain too much as writers. In fact, I like this so much that I tweeted out something similar last week before I even knew Anne Rice had offered the same advice.

 

Don’t avoid the uncomfortable subjects. Find that pain and write about it.

 

“Go where the pleasure is.”

Rice says, “Write the book that’s interesting to you.” Then later explains that if the book becomes boring to you, don’t give up on it, think about “what do I have to do to make it exciting to me.”

I think we often times forget this as authors, particularly the part about becoming discouraged once the book we’re writing begins to bore us. Instead of going where the pleasure is, we try to just plow through and make it work. We would all, writer and reader alike, be better off if us authors asked ourselves more often, “Is this interesting to me?”

 

“Never revise [your] book because you got a rejection from an editor with a bunch of negative advice.”

This advice was quite profound to me. It may seem obvious and simple, but I think that’s what makes it so wonderful.

Advice from someone that hates your work isn’t going to be good advice. They clearly don’t get it. Don’t change anything to try and please them. It’s a waste of time because they either aren’t your target reader or they didn’t give your book a fair shake. Any advice they give is going to be advice that leads your book astray.

Rice goes on to say, “Wait until you get a letter from an editor that says, ‘We really love your book. We’d like to publish it, but do you think…'”

That’s when you take the advice to heart. That’s when the advice is going to have the best interest of your writing in mind. By all means welcome that kind of advice with open arms, but reject the advice of the editor that hates your work from the start.

I really love this.

 

“The only thing between you and realizing your dreams as a writer is yourself.”

This is a perfect place to end and it brings us back full circle.  Rice begins by telling us to write and finishes with a variation on the same advice.

Being a writer is one of the only professions that is completely accessible to you right now at this very moment. The only thing stopping you is your belief that you can do it. Sit down and write. You can do it.

 

'The only thing between you and realizing your dreams as a writer is yourself.' -Anne Rice #writerslifeClick To Tweet

 

Find more writing and publishing tips at Nothing Any Good.

 

Writing Advice from Famous Authors: Christopher Hitchens

  1. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: Ta-Nehisi Coates
  2. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: Ian McEwan
  3. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: Christopher Hitchens
  4. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: Anne Rice
  5. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: John Hodgman
  6. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: SLCC
  7. Writing Advice from Famous Authors: Ray Bradbury

Christopher Hitchens

 

Let’s dive into our third edition of Writing Advice from Famous Authors. I have been impressed by how well received the first two informal installments of this series were, so we’re going to formalize it (sort of) and make it a recurring piece on Nothing Any Good. Check out the excellent Writing Advice from Ta-Nehisi Coates and Ian McEwan.

Our third Famous Author is the brilliant lightning-rod of a writer that was Christopher Hitchens. If you are unfamiliar with the late Hitchens, who passed away in 2011 and would most likely be mad a me for saying late and passed away—sorry, he died; Christopher Hitchens died—is a writer with very strong and vocal opinions about, well, mostly everything. He is largely known for being a professed atheist and was very publicly vocal towards many public figures, including Mother Teresa and Princess Diana.

Regardless of whether you agree with Hitchens, and many people feel very strongly against him, he was a brilliant thinker and fantastic writer. He has written or edited over thirty books, including the New York Times Bestseller God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything.

His writing is not for the faint of heart. Be prepared to think deeply and be be challenged if you pick up any of his books or articles.

Here is Christopher Hitchens in 2010:

 

 

“If you write, it must be the thing not that you want to do or would like to do; it must be the thing you feel you have to do.”

Hitchens main point in this open statement is that being a writer is a very disappointing undertaking. We love to glamorize the life of a writer, but truth be told, it is often times a path paved with  disappointment. Being a writer can be a lonely undertaking. In fact, that’s one of the central tenants of Nothing Any Good. That is, Nothing Any Good is partially aimed at trying to help pierce into that loneliness. My goal has been to create a platform for Indie Authors to collaborate and share in this journey together.

Hitchens knows this life of disappointment far better than I do. If you feel you have to write, regardless of the outcome of that writing, this will serve you well as you persevere through the daily disappointments and rejections.

 

“The idea is to find a voice, and I try to write as if I was speaking to people.'”

This is great advice. I think many inexperienced writers fail this test. They try to use big words and an odd turn of phrase in an effort to show that they belong as a writer. Unfortunately, it has the opposite effect. The reader’s eyes start to glaze over and they become bored.

If you want to write well, find that speaking voice that resonates with readers and speak directly to them.

 

Fnd that voice that resonates with readers and speak directly to them. Click To Tweet

 

“Alcohol is a personal deformation of the scribbler.”

I love this line. It is emblematic of the great thinker and writer that Hitchens was. This simple statement is fairly deep and is stated beautifully, all while having a touch of dry humor wrapped into it.

Because of the isolation that naturally comes with writing, many writers look to alcohol as a crutch. Alcohol is the voice that drowns out the silence left in the void between the author and the reader. Alcohol is match that lights the fuse of creativity. Alcohol is a personal deformation of the scribbler.

If you frequent Nothing Any Good, then you know I love a nice glass of scotch or red wine. It’s no secret to anyone that knows me. (If you’re wondering what to get me for Christmas, there you go.) The key is to make sure the indulgence doesn’t make the quality suffer. I think this is what Hitchens is cheekily and poignantly getting at at the end of the clip.

 

 

Find more writing and publishing tips at Nothing Any Good.

 

David Boles On Writing

Twitter ran a fun little “Moment” yesterday with David Boles.

Boles is the author of over 50 books and over 25,000 articles. He has a goal of writing 2,000,000 million words each year. You think you’re measly goal of a thousand words a day is lofty?!?

Twitter compiled a number of tweets from the last year by David Boles, who you can follow @DavidBoles. You can view the entire Moment here, but I wanted to share some of my favorites.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Find more writing and publishing tips at Nothing Any Good.

 

 

 

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