Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Rule #2-Talent is Not Skill

If you find yourself particularly drawn to the hobby, mode of expression, art form that is writing, chances are pretty good that you've got a knack for it. You see the nuanced differences between similar words, can describe a scene with stunning detail, craft sentences that seem to flow into one another. Maybe you are bombarded by imaginative plot ideas on a daily basis. All of this is well and good, but, to quote Spiderman, "With great power comes great responsibility." And your talent is a kind of power, a stronger one that you might realize. You should hold onto that notion, no matter what twists and turns your writerly life takes. But it won't serve you as well as it can without cultivation. Talent is not skill.

Think of talent as raw ore and skill as the act of working the metal into something usable. Skill is the act of shaping, creating something that can be recognized and enjoyed by the world outside your head.

The next ten entries will focus on what can be taught and practiced-skill. I'll leave the inspiration and epiphanies to your respective muses.




  • Decide if your work will be plot or character-driven and proceed accordingly. Consider how to engage your audience and keep them engaged throughout. Length and layout may both come into play.
  • Plan before you write
  • Do your research. 
  • Don't waste a single detail
  • Imagine characters/portray and place people in a particular context
  • Use language appropriate for your target audience
  • Come up with a plan for maintaining consistency throughout your work
  • Be true to the world you've created or the perspective you've adopted
  • Read the things that have been written in your genre or field. And then learn to read between the lines
  • Be aware of the extent to which you write yourself into your writing

Do all of these things and you'll find you have more control over your writing. I know that research and planning have long been considered a buzzkill to artists, but I feel that they're the stones in which the road to writing success is paved. They give form to whatever it is that drives us. 

Next Up: The Ultimate Showdown! Plot-Driven vs Character-Driven










Monday, May 25, 2015

Rule #1-Life is inspiration

We writers have a kind of reclusive reputation, if you know what I mean. We're the tortured geniuses, the socially awkward, the misunderstood, the voices of reason in a world of increasing madness...

Ok, ok. In all truth, we may be all of those things or none of them. Writers are as diverse as the books you'll see lining the shelves of your local library or the witticisms you'll hear rendered poetically. What unites us is our passion for what we do. And while inspiration for our words may occasionally come from quaint dreams and musings, I find that most inspiration comes from two sources: exposing ourselves to the work of others and living our lives.

Most of us don't start off as writers after all. The Writerly Life is the one we live when we're being our truest selves, but we live in a world where that isn't always possible. Batman can't always be out righting the wrongs of a city in chaos. Sometimes he has to be Bruce Wayne, managing all of the affairs that a billionaire must manage (would that that particular problem were ours!) Perhaps there is a better example in Peter Parker, who must deal with the ups and downs of his teenage years when he isn't wearing his mask. What he is impacts his waking life and it is the same in most of us. But we must still live the lives that enable us to exist.  Most of us put in long days at the office, feel the demands of domestic life, occasionally wish everyone would just leave us alone so we might get in touch with our own thoughts.

But this life that isn't the life we really want to be living, this life that we feel the need to escape from, it really is a source of great inspiration. And perhaps viewing it as such even makes it a better life. The people who break our hearts can be rendered devious villains. The unexpected storms of life can be fantasticized. We can create characters to bear the burdens we otherwise bear alone, and if we can deliver them through the onslaught of their circumstances, there's hope for us too, isn't there?

At this point, I imagine you're wanting some personal anecdote, some evidence that I have myself been capable of being inspired by my circumstances.

Let it suffice it to say that I fell in love with a boy, relocated to another part of the world for him, and was abandoned a few months later. I was once wounded that he saw so much to loathe in me, but upon reflection, I see such carefully veiled imperfections in him as might exist in a villain. Not your in-your-face, serving-the-forces-of-evil villain perhaps. But the devious, manipulative variety? Oh hell yes. I was deceived, wasn't I? Couldn't my audience be as well?

Think on your own lives. You've seen someone whose appearance made some kind of a lasting impression. Or you've lost someone you cherished deeply. You've loved and lost. Maybe you've even been fortunate enough to have loved and won. You've pondered the mysteries of life and filled in the blanks for yourself. You've envisioned other worlds, better ones you might escape ones or worse ones you might use to bolster your belief that your circumstances aren't so bad after all.

Take a look at the works of people who write what you write. Then take a step back and live your life. Follow your passion in your spare moments. Transform yourself through the works you create, and know that the life you had to lived in the meantime was the impetus for your deliverance.