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and whatever works to help people become the kinds of writers they want to be, well, I'm all for it.
Sometimes, though, there can be too much going on between the writer and the actual writing. That was what I was talking about in response to your very kind and informative post about POVs.
I spent some time writing appellate briefs, a task I wouldn't even wish on George W. Bush. Dry, unappealing (no pun intended), strictly limited, and vitally focused on swaying a judge. Scary stuff. It goes beyond informative into the advocacy realm, and with whatever is at risk, it's nervewracking work, but also devilishly difficult writing.
When I took up fiction, it was only as a way of unwinding after a day of practicing law. I've never taken a writing course or read a book about writing. What I have done since the age of three is read. Everything and anything. And I am convinced that reading - not crap, but difficult and challenging works, books that make you go to the dictionary to look up words, books that might, at first not seem terribly interesting, books that just happen to be within reach - is the secret to good writing.
I don't trust groups, nor do I trust writing teachers. Sure, there are the basics that can be taught, and they are essential, but a few dozen readings of Elements of Style can take care of that. I'm of the opinion that writing is a talent, just like perfect pitch or people who can play musical instruments by ear, and it can be cultivated, but it cannot be taught. Either it's there or it's not.
But, that's a lot of nonsense, too, since what's "good writing"? Am I a better writer than someone who's not published? It's all so subjective, and so much of a crapshoot, of being in the right time with the right agent at the right time, that the idea that anyone is a better writer than anyone else is laughable.
Of course, there are those who should have their laptops taken away from them, all writing instruments removed from the home, and paper burned immediately. When my first book sold, every relative of every friend suddenly had a "book" that s/he wanted me to read. Because I was new to the game, and because I love my friends, I read these things.
Well, I tried.
I learned very quickly to make sure people knew I couldn't read unpublished works because of a clause in my contract with my publisher. That may or may not be true. But it works.
Ultimately, it's about getting lost in the story. If you get lost in your story, that's great, but you also have the responsibility of making sure you're getting your reader lost with you - that's imperative, and that's when you must think of the reader. If you get lost and don't know where you are, that's not good; if you get lost because you've successfully and willingly suspended disbelief, that's the best.
Trust yourself, that's all I know. I was such a naif when I started in this business, I asked my editor what a "writing workshop" was. Seriously. I had no idea.
And her answer to me was wonderful.
She said, "Something you'll never go to."
I think it's a whole lot more important to trust yourself and your talent than to trust the opinions of strangers, who might or might not know anything more than you do. I've heard stories of people having their efforts eviscerated in workshops, and they were never able to write anything again.
Of course, they never had to deal with critics and reviews, so maybe they got out at the right time.
But, I'm all over the place here - when I get started about writing, I wax endlessly, so forgive and ignore me - and what I've used so many words to say is that I think maybe worrying about the mechanics - POV, for instance - might detract the writer from the essential spontaneity and fun of getting the story down on paper. I think a writer, in his/her heart and head, knows exactly how to tell the story, but only gets flummoxed when s/he stops and thinks about it.
Sometimes the scariest thing in the world is to (so to speak) put pen to paper. If you don't start, you can't make any mistakes.
It's scary, and getting bogged down in the "shoulds" and the rules can sometimes get between the writer and the story.
Trust yourself - I guess that's all I know.
I'll shut up now........................
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