Janice Campbell Founding Member of the National Association of Independent Writers and Editors
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How to Become a Writer

October 30, 2009 1 Comment

Note: I wrote the article below last year, but thought it might be a good idea to post it here before NaNoWriMo, as it contains the “secret” to becoming a real writer.
I was sitting at a sidewalk table last week, enjoying a cup of coffee, when I overheard a group of twenty-somethings at the next table talking about the writers’ conference that was scheduled for the next weekend. The conversation turned to the art of writing.

“It just takes so long to get inspired…”

“I get stuck making the first paragraph perfect, and never get any farther.”

“I get this great idea, then the phone rings, and it’s my friend, and I end up going out and when I get back the idea is gone, and I don’t have anything to say.”

“There’s just not enough time. I get home from work, and it’s dinner, catch the news, work out, go out with friends, walk the dog, call my mom, whatever. There’s just not enough time to write.”

“When I write, I have to get my music going, light candles, make sure everything’s perfect, then I can get in the the mood, and it will all flow.”

“I can write pages and pages, and I know it’s good, so I don’t even have to go back to read it. Someday, I’m going to sit down and write a whole book.”

Anytime I hear a conversation about writing, I’m fascinated. Writing is my avocation– something I’ve done steadily since childhood, at one level or another. Although I started with some of the same ideas as the young people I overheard, I’ve since learned a few things.

If you wait for inspiration, you’ll never write anything.

If you stop to perfect the first paragraph, you’ll never get any farther.

If you don’t stop distractions, they will stop you.

If you don’t take the time to write, you’ll never be a writer. You have the same 24 hours a day that everyone else has. You choose how you’re going to spend it.

If you wait for the perfect mood, moment, and method, it’s likely that you’ll still be waiting when the undertaker arrives.

If you fall in love with your words as they spill unedited onto the page, you’ll never write well. An 1879 article from the New York Times (download in PDF) eloquently elaborates on Byron’s point that “easy writing is cursed hard reading.”

Almost anyone can learn basic writing skills; many people can learn to write well; a few will become writers. The foundation for each level of skill is not talent, but discipline. If you want to become a writer, you must do two things:

  1. Write
  2. Rewrite

It’s that simple. Sit down and write using whatever method is at hand. Don’t wait for a new computer, a soft leather notebook, new purple pens, 27 years of backstory, full biographies for all the supporting characters, the perfect name for your main character (just use “Fred” until inspiration strikes), complete details on the historical context, or the stars to align. Just sit down and write.

When you have written, it’s time to edit and rewrite. Evaluate your prose; cut the fat; sharpen your verbs, tighten the narrative. If you have trouble evaluating your own writing, find an editor that you can trust (search the NAIWE database), and get some feedback.

If you aren’t writing, you can’t be a writer, no matter what you

  • want to do,
  • plan to do,
  • intend to do.

If you aren’t doing it, you aren’t a writer. If you want to write, sit down and write. That’s how Jane Austen did it. That’s how Victor Hugo did it. That’s how you’ll have to do it, if you really want to be a writer.

You may or may not have the creativity, knowledge, and skills needed to become an Edith Wharton or a C.S. Lewis, but if you have self-discipline to sit down and write, whether or not conditions are perfect, you’ll grow in the skills you need to become a writer.

Once you’ve learned how to be a writer, you’ll need to learn how to be published. But that’s a subject for another day. For now, you just need to write (and so do I). And if you wonder what kind of writer would get sidetracked with soft notebooks, purple pens, and ridiculous amounts of backstory, you’re looking at her. So yes, I’m preaching to the choir!

Categories: Inspiration, Writing

Overnight Success: Other Stories

October 19, 2009 Post a comment

Since my first post on overnight success, I’ve discovered that it’s a well-discussed topic. Here are a few other interesting takes on the subject.

Ovenight Success stories at Crime Fiction Blog

We’ve all heard of the author who is an instant success. It’s enough to discourage anyone else who spends spare time writing, reading, writing, reading, writing in the hope of one day seeing the light of publication! Here is a collection of short narratives by over 60 authors, telling their “overnight success” stories. Some did experience almost overnight success, but others took a more leisurely path. The bottom line? They’ve all been published.

Seth Godin’s take on Overnight Success

Seth’s work is always thought-provoking, and in this post he suggests that “The goal, I think, is to be an overnight failure, but one that persists.” I have to agree!

Overnight Success in 4-1/2 Years

A story that appeared last week in The Globe and Mail (Toronto) tells the story of Peter Stebbings’ screenplay for Defendor.

Chris Brogan Takes on the Idea of Overnight Success (Part 1) (Part 2)

In two video posts (What it Takes to Be an Overnight Success and Overnight Success 2- A Call to Arms), blogger Chris Brogan assesses what goes with the idea of overnight success. He provides a clear look at what his life really looks like, makes it clear that this is what he signed up for, then challenges viewers to get in the game and make a difference for others.

Spotify Co-Founder: Notion of Overnight Success “Misleading and Harmful”

I know that the idea of overnight success can be discouraging, but in this post, Daniel Ek suggests that it can actually be harmful to a company’s chance for long-term success. Be careful what you wish for!

Guitar Hero is Another (10-Year) Overnight Success

 Don Dodge shares stories of Guitar Hero and iRobot, two “overnight successes.” He points out that Guitar Hero was the 9th video game produced by Harmonix, 10 years after founding the company, and that iRobot tried 18 different business models in 12 years before reaching the iRobot.

Overnight Success Takes Years

Don’t tell the guys at 37Signals that “you can’t get there because you don’t have a huge audience already.” They’ll tell you to stop whining and get busy, because that’s what it takes!

 The Long-term Downside of Overnight Success

“Easy come, easy go” is what my grandmother used to say when something happened too fast, and scholars at the Wharton School of Business have confirmed that there’s indeed something to that idea. This interesting post reports on a study that tracks the rate of adoption and abandonment of baby names, and the result suggests that the faster something becomes popular, the more quickly it’s dropped. Something to think about!

When I started thinking about this topic, I had no idea it was top-of-the-mind for so many people. There is much more to read on the topic if you like, but like me, you’d probably be better served by getting back to work and creating your own overnight success!

Categories: Inspiration

Overnight Success: A Product of Long-Term Strategy (Part 2)

October 19, 2009 Post a comment

Overnight success? The seeds of success were planted decades ago when my favorite author of the moment wasn’t writing fast enough to suit me (I wanted a sequel to Where the Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendak). The librarian, dear Mrs. Rogers, explained that writers just couldn’t write as fast as I could read. “I’ll just write my own books,” I told her, and that spoken-aloud decision was the beginning of everything.

In my laborious little-kid longhand, I began to write. I started with stories (one of the first involved a precocious squirrel), but soon moved on to diaries, letters, and lists of more stories to write and then a little newspaper with hand-drawn illustrations (short-lived), and eventually articles, essays, and more.

The goal began as “writing what I wanted to read,” but the path became a process of doing it and teaching others to do it as well. The success I really wanted wasn’t solitary– it was success that brought others along for the journey. No matter where I’ve gone, or what my writing niche has been, my mission has included lighting lamps so that others could see more clearly as they traveled a similar path.

So maybe it’s too late to ever be an overnight success. But I’m not worried. The purpose that was planted when I was a child is still growing. There have been unexpected sprouts and blossoms along the way, and there have been seasons of drought, frost, and blight, but the roots are strong, and there are stories to tell. I’m here, I’m still moving, and authentic, creative, and abundant long-term success is where I plan to go.

Categories: Commentary, Inspiration

Overnight Success: What Does It Really Look Like?

October 16, 2009 1 Comment

I’ve traveled a lot this year to conferences and mastermind meetings, and I’ve met a lot of interesting people and learned a lot of amazing things. It’s been a transformative year in many ways, and I’ve recently received compliments on my “overnight success.”

Tip: If you ever want to see an otherwise articulate entrepreneur speechless, just compliment them on their overnight success.  

I’m not a strict constructionist, but to me, “overnight” has a meaning that simply isn’t congruent with success. Whether “success” is defined as having achieved a comfortable financial level and a certain amount of visibility and standing in a chosen field or publication by a prestigious publisher, success isn’t something that happens overnight.

 

What does success look like? 

 

  • Success begins long before others wake up.
  • Success begins with a dream, a plan, a strategy, and concrete goals.
  • Success is built on a strong foundation of learning, growing, sharing, and giving.
  • Success is starting, stumbling, stopping, and starting once again.
  • Success doesn’t always depend on spectacular leaps, but upon the day-in, day-out doing of little things, and the readiness to make that spectacular leap when the opportunity arises.
  • True success looks far ahead and does the thing that will matter in twenty years, rather than in twenty minutes, or twenty days.

The kind of success I’m interested in is the success that achieves balance between personal vision and professional mission. This sometimes means that visible overnight success takes longer to arrive, but when it does, it’s congruent with my deepest values. It’s that authentic, creative, and abundant vision that makes the journey worthwhile, and builds the kind of success I believe in.

Categories: Commentary, Inspiration

Free Books!

September 3, 2009 1 Comment

booksWhy? Why do I go through cycles of forgetting the library? I stopped by today to donate old magazines to the give-away basket and came out with amazing riches. The reading pile by my chair is teetering dangerously, but here’s what’s at the top of the stack:

Called Out of Darkness: A Spiritual Confession by Ann Rice

Flip! How to Turn Everything You Know on its Head –and Succeed Beyond Your Wildest Imaginings by Peter Sheahan

Discovering the Enneagram: An Ancient Tool for a New Spiritual Journey by Richard Rohr and Andreas Ebert

Talent is Never Enough by John Maxwell

What Not To Wear by Trinny Woodall & Susannah Constantine (I do enjoy these prescriptive tomes, if only for the delight of reading orders, then doing exactly as I please!)

And from the discard shelf, I bought:

Listen! The Wind by Anne Morrow Lindbergh (slipcased, like new, 50 cents)

Diary of a Left-Handed Bird Watcher by Leonard Nathan

The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco (nice trade paperback to replace ratty one I already own, 25 cents)

The Young Visitors by Daisy Ashford (Preface by JM Barrie, copyright 1919, Ashford was purportedly 9 years old when she wrote this, and it started out quite amusingly)

The Republic of Tea: How an Idea Becomes a Business–Letters to a Young Zentrepreneur by Mel Ziegler, Bill Rosenzwieg, Patricia Ziegler

There are more, but I haven’t time to list them. I need to get outside and read a bit in the waning rays of the sun.

Imagine that, though…nourishment for mind, spirit, soul, and body– all for less than a boutique cup of coffee. Not that I’d refuse the coffee. But the library has FREE BOOKS! Why do I keep forgetting that? Go to the library, people. It’s where the smart stuff is!

Categories: Inspiration, Reading

Luck = Preparation + Opportunity

September 1, 2009 Post a comment

Good tree, good fruit.Literary agent Rachelle Gardner writes one of my favorite blogs, and her post this week is spot on. In Your Lucky Break! she addresses a reader’s question about why stories about finding an agent so often seem to involve “some lucky break or some connection.” Right.

Gardner responds by clearly reminding us all that we each create our own lucky breaks. She states, “You create the potential opportunities by networking with other writers and people in publishing. You create preparedness by being the best writer you can.” Yes! I can’t even begin to suppress the “I told you so!” that bubbled up as soon as I read this.

I’ve heard some people use the phrase “some people get all the breaks” as an excuse for lack of success, but really, it’s a success tip in disguise. Some people do get all the breaks, but that’s because they’ve positioned themselves well, they’ve honed their craft, and they’ve made the effort to network with others in their field. They didn’t wait for manna to fall from the sky; they went out and plowed the field and planted seed. What you do today will bear fruit in season.

Categories: Business, Coaching, Inspiration

“Epithalamion”-A Summer Poem by Gerard Manley Hopkins

July 22, 2009 1 Comment

The poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins inspire me as no others do. His playful way with words and incredibly vivid images are distinctive and memorable. It’s important for writers–even business and non-fiction writers– to study the use of language, and to read things that can improve their prose. Hopkins’ poems can do just that. Enjoy!

Epithalamion
by Gerard Manley Hopkins (1918)

Hark, hearer, hear what I do; lend a thought now, make believe
We are leafwhelmed somewhere with the hood
Of some branchy bunchy bushybowered wood,
Southern dene or Lancashire clough or Devon cleave,
That leans along the loins of hills, where a candycoloured, where a gluegold-brown
Marbled river, boisterously beautiful, between
Roots and rocks is danced and dandled, all in froth and waterblowballs, down.
We are there, when we hear a shout
That the hanging honeysuck, the dogeared hazels in the cover
Makes dither, makes hover
And the riot of a rout
Of, it must be, boys from the town
Bathing: it is summer’s sovereign good.

By there comes a listless stranger: beckoned by the noise
He drops towards the river: unseen
Sees the bevy of them, how the boys
With dare and with downdolphinry and bellbright bodies huddling out,
Are earthworld, airworld, waterworld thorough hurled, all by turn and turn about.

[Read more…]

Categories: Inspiration, Quotes

What do you value most about the freedom to work independently?

July 3, 2009 10 Comments

In honor of Independence Day, July 4, I’ve been thinking about the things I most value about the freelance life. There are many wonderful things about this life, but here, in no particular order, are the things that rank highest for me:

  • The freelance lifestyle
  • The ability to be creative and get paid for it
  • Flexible schedule
  • Power to choose who I work with
  • Freedom to increase income as needed
  • Personal autonomy
  • Doing what I love and getting paid for it

As far as I’m concerned, the freelance life is the most interesting, challenging, potentially profitable, enjoyable life available. All the positives come with a flip side, though. There’s also the burden of complete responsibility for results. If things are not going well, it’s difficult to blame it on anyone else when you’re a solopreneur! [Read more…]

Categories: Inspiration

Words Can Be Visual Art

June 19, 2009 1 Comment

I came across Wordle, an interesting tool that can create a visual word cloud from a selection of words or a blog feed. I tried it on the feed from this blog, and came up with the following image:
http://www.naiwe.com

Images of Wordles are licensed Creative Commons License.

Categories: Inspiration, Words

Does More Hours = Freelance Writing Success?

June 4, 2009 Post a comment

I just came across an interesting article in which Sarah Paretsky, author of the V.I. Warshawski series, talks about being a successful writer. The bottom line seems to come down to more hours behind the keyboard.

In addition to writing books, the author must be prepared to very actively market them in order to maintain visibility. Although many writers imagine that authors didn’t have to promote their own works in the good old days, that’s not true. Successful writers such as Mark Twain and Charles Dickens have always been willing to bring themselves and their works before readers.

Now it’s easier than ever to write, publish, and market, all without ever leaving the comfort of home. Losing the commute has given freelancers more productive hours than ever before. I’m guessing that means that success is right around the corner!

(If you’re still feeling shy, don’t miss Colleen Lindsay’s rant on self promotion in The Swivet. It’s both funny and true!)

Categories: Inspiration, Writing

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