Simple writing tips
1. Have fun
If you’re not enjoying what you’re doing especially
what your writing, this will come across in your writing. If you don’t enjoy
your writing than how can you expect your readers to? This can go for bloggers
also. Not everyone will be interested in the same topic but there are so many
ways of describing the same thing and making it interesting depending on the
audience you are approaching. It helps to have a readable book. It doesn’t mean
it needs to be dumbed down and even using a word that isn’t used very often in
a sentence when the reader can understand what the word is simply from the sentence, however
it can get frustrating if you are whipping out your dictionary all the time. People
want flow and there isn’t any if they are constantly stopping. It might be fun
to use unusual words however keep your reader in mind and don’t go overboard or
you will lose the audience you are trying to get the attention of.
2. Don’t force yourself
When you force yourself you tend to miss the little
pieces that your thought process would have come up with that makes either a
blog or novel more interesting. Stories tend to be rushed while interviews miss
either vital or interesting questions. It’s nice to have a goal but make sure it’s
not a concrete goal. If your story seems forced and the direction doesn’t seem
natural, this is when you want to be flexible and let the story take on a life
of its own. It might surprise you where your story or interview takes you. You want
to make sure this is your best quality of work. Too often people wish later
after their novel is out there for the public to see, they would have added something
else or had the ending vary a little differently. Yes now you can change things
later on but your readers have already seen it in the original form. Changing it
later doesn’t really leave a professional impression and if you want people to
take you seriously as a writer you need to take your work seriously also.
3. Take pride in your work, it’s a representation of
yourself
As I slightly touched on earlier, you want to keep a
professional attitude and work ethic. Your work is a reflection on you and what
your reader sees they will be judging any future work based on this. You might
get lucky and have someone read your future work before your earlier work. Everyone
is going to grow as a writer however this should only make you a better one and
not where the reader wonders, did they really write this drivel from before? If
readers do not like your work they more likely than not will not like anything
else from you. I’ve read tons of books and several I could not finish because
it was so horrible and I would never read another book from that author again. There
are far more readers with this view point then not.
4. Don’t let all the rules to writing make it hard
for you.
Throw out the rules. If everyone stuck to the rules
then all stories would be the same. If all books sounded the same coming from
the same point of view, the same timelines, the same concepts for paranormal or
regular characters, the same grammar content, the same plot lines. Otherwise it
makes the books boring and pointless to read another authors work if it all
sounds the same. Even these last few sentences sound boring simply from using “the
same” several times to get a point across which I could have used another
description or wording to do so. If you get tied up with all of the writing
rules it might frustrate you too much making writing no longer enjoyable or
more of a chore than anything else.
Everyone is different when and how they write. It’s important
to find your writing style, what you’re comfortable with and what makes your
story appealing to you. I generally compare my writing this way when I think of
others reading it. I generally give great gifts because they are what I would
want myself. I write what I enjoy and what I love to read and know that there
will be those out there that will love it also. I have read so many books by so
many different authors and I’ve found which ones write the way I like and which
ones that I don’t and for the reasons why. The best way of becoming a great
writer is to be a great reader. We don’t always have massive amount of time but
it is important to read and write.
A couple of side notes and not exactly to do with
writing tips.
Your personality:
If you seem argumentative, sloppy,
rude, disorganized, hate talking to people. All of these things will count
against you. Especially if you are an independent author. You will need to get
to know your audience and be friendly not only with them but other venues that
you intend on selling your book with. Once you start talking about your book or its published it has become a business and needs to come across professionally if you want anyone to take you seriously. It is extremely important that you be
organized otherwise if you are fortunate to be busy or have book signings it
will help you keep all the dates, places, what is required to travel along with
you and who you might be speaking with. It helps to plan these things ahead of
time. It helps to allow flexible changes but if these don’t happen then you are
ready with what you prepared.
Reviews for your book:
In some point during your writing career you will
get a bad review. Well established authors who have sold millions of copies or
have huge followers have negative reviews. Not everyone is going to like your
writing, it might not be their style, or there are errors which can be fixed,
to long of a book, to short, they didn’t like the direction your characters
took, inconsistent story-line or the basic reader who doesn’t like your genre
but gave it a try. Those are all legitimate complaints.
The ones that most worry about and writers really
need to let these go. For one thing when a potential reader sees the words, “don’t
read this book or worst book ever.” They are going to read the review to see
why they wrote that. If a person writes after that stating the book was just
horrible and nothing more. That’s not enough to go on and will be ignored. Also
there are people who thrive on being mean. They simply leave a mean, nasty
reply because they can and not that the book warrants it. If they compare these
comments with others they will find this person either didn’t read the book at
all or are being rude for the sake of it.
Don’t let negative reviews get you down or stop you
from writing. Find out if there is something you can improve with your writing
but if its negative for the sake of then let it go. It has no basis on your
ability to write and convey a story. If you have doubts, find someone you trust
and have them read your book. Getting a second opinion always helps but I will
warn you. Before sending your work to an editor, publisher, friend, reviewers
online or anywhere else. Make sure you have it copy written. Ideas cannot be copy
written however a written story can be protected from someone else putting
their name on it.
Place to write your book:
Find a place and time that works for you. Not everyone
can devote eight hours a day to writing. With reality around us, family, pets,
jobs, noisy neighbors, concentration issues, lack of sleep, poor diet, physical
and mental ailments are a few and there are many more reasons to add to the
list. Personally I write in the dark after everyone is asleep in bed and taken
care of, in my bed. I write for 15 minutes a day. I read while I’m in the
bathroom for that few seconds I’m in there. I’ve learned how to keep three nails
wedged just right on the wall so I can balance a book while I shower or if I
want to write during that time I’ll take a tape recorder. Some need the noise
or life happening around them to write while others need silence and personal
space. We don’t always get what we want but if we have that desire to write we
will find time to squeeze it in. If you have time to be on the internet, watch TV
or listen to music then you have time to read and write.
I’ve been asked if it’s alright to ask a spouse to
leave while you write. I told them HELL NO! They have as much right to be there
as you do. If they are intentionally stopping you from writing then you need to
find another place to write. It’s incredibly selfish to ask someone to leave
the house so that you can write. If you can plan maybe when they do the grocery
shopping, watching a movie or during something they might be out. That would be
fine but to say I want to right so you have to leave. Its showing you have more
concern over your writing then the person you made vows with and being disrespectful
of them. It doesn't hurt to arrange time before hand but make sure they have something they want to do otherwise your making their situation more uncomfortable and this is a person you want on your side. This person is your cheering team! Perhaps they can take up a hobby also. My husband and I are fortunate that both of us love writing. We both pick the same time to write and he generally writes in the living room while I write upstairs, occasionally we switch to keep our situation from being stale.
Yes it is a great thing to be passionate about
writing but with anything in life don’t forget what a real priority is and what
promises you made before you started to write. Don’t be selfish. You can live
your dream without being selfish!
No comments:
Post a Comment