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Elements of Craft

Special Advice for Beginners
So you wanna be a writer when you grow up, huh? My first word
of advice is don't. Don't become a writer. Not for money. Not
for glory. Not for any reason unless you have a passion in your
gut that is so strong that nothing can prevent you from writing.
Unless you have stories in you that you must tell, and writing
them is as important to you as eating and sleeping and breathing.
And sometimes more important.
With that out of the way, I assume you have passion. So, what
do you do with this life of yours to pave your way to the writing
world? Read. Observe. Write. Live. Those are the four main ingredients
to preparing yourself to write.
Read everything you can get your hands on. Read classic
literature, read literary fiction, read commercial fiction. Read
books on the craft of writing. Read books on writers. Read dictionaries.
Read cereal boxes. Just read.
Observe. If there is one attribute a writer must have
(other than his passion to write), it is the ability to notice
details. What is it about the way she walks that captures your
attention? Is it her clothes? Her figure? Her wiggle? What words
could you use to describe the preacher's snorts between shouts?
What do his eyes look like when he says "Hell"? What
keeps his hair from falling into his eyes (or onto the floor)?
Look at your surroundings as though you're showing them to
someone who's never been to your area. Notice the sounds you
would hear if you listened. Notice the smells, the colors, the
textures, everything you normally take for granted. Think of
new ways to describe old things.
Write every day. It doesn't matter if it's a dozen
words or a dozen pages, write. And don't limit your writing to
your passion -- try writing poetry, fiction, journal entries,
essays. Keep a journal or notebook with you at all times and
jot your thoughts as you think them.
Live. Can you write about New York City if you've never
been there? Probably -- if you've seen enough movies and read
enough descriptions, you could write with integrity about a city
you've never seen. However, you would not be able to add any
new insight. For me, a small town girl, it was the vastness of
the big city that took my breath away. And that most of the thousands
of people all scurrying to some place would gladly pause a moment
to give directions or advice.
Visit as many places as you possibly can, but also consider
actually living in as many different types of places as you can.
Yes, you can get superficial impressions of cultures during a
seven-day vacation, but to truly understand a culture, you need
to experience it more deeply. I've lived in small towns, large
cities, suburbs, villages and deep in the country. I've lived
in apartments, houses, complexes, dormitories, alone, with friends,
with family. I've lived in Appalachia, the Midwest and the Deep
South. And each of these have left an imprint (as well as an
accent!).
Experience as many aspects of life as you can. Can you really
understand the pain of heartbreak if you've never been loved
and left? Can you understand the intensity of a mother's (or
father's) love if you've never experienced it? Can you understand
the thrill of surviving the bunny slope on down hill skis if
you've never put your life at stake?
This isn't to say you must become an alcoholic to understand
alcoholism (although it does help) or a bank robber to understand
a thief. What it does mean is that writers need to take more
chances than the average Joe, need to experience more of life
in order to write more knowledgeably. It also means that writers
must have empathy to understand people and situations
beyond their personal experience.
What kind of job should you hold while waiting to publish?
Well, many successful writers have had successful careers in
business, law, medicine, education or any area you can think
of before becoming published. However, I think it is best if
you don't get too comfortable in another career, if you work
at something you don't like and change jobs often. This way,
you will never forget your passion for writing or your drive
to publish. (Just don't go into debt. Live humbly and within
your means, because once you sign that car loan, you are obligated
to your 8-5 job). Some suggestions:
- Work with people from diverse backgrounds, such as you can
meet in airports, resorts, hotels and restaurants. These give
you plenty of characters to draw on.
- Work physically. Manual work doesn't occupy your mind. I
do some of my best creative thinking while washing dishes by
hand and mopping floors.
- Work where you have free time to write, such as night desk
clerk, night guard at a business, bowling alley clerk (on the
slow shift), car lot attendant, and so on.
I am fond of saying that there are two aspects to writing
-- the craft and the art. The craft is that which can be learned
-- grammar, using active voice, the basics of dialogue and so
forth. The art is the God-given talent that a writer is either
blessed with or isn't. It is the ability to "see" the
details in a setting and relay that in interesting, unique words
to make the reader feel the location. It is the ability to understand
human nature and empathize with even the most dastardly villain.
If you have that talent, and if you have that passion to write
no matter what the odds, you are a writer. And nobody can take
that away from you.

Want more great tips and techniques? Our Inspiration for Writers Tips and Techniques Workbook
is now available for immediate download. Expanded tips, more
topics, reproducible worksheets, exercises to practice what you
learn and much more--check it out!
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(c) copyright 2001 by Sandy Tritt. All rights reserved, except
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