"Drawing character's
from life does not mean transferring real people into fiction
exactly as you saw them. So, I use parts of real people -- a
gesture here, a mannerism there, a certain kind of jawline and
put them together to make someone new and interesting."
Margaret Chittenden
"People will read stories
only as long as they care about what happens to the characters;
therefore, the writer's first task is to make readers like the
hero...enough to want good things to happen to them, or hate
and fear the villains enough to want bad things to happen to
them."
Phillip R. Craig
"A writer must trust his or her intuition.
If I didn't, I couldn't write a book, because I never know from
day to day what's going to happen next. I trust my intuition
and my subconscious. I believe the stories are always working
in my head and when I sit down I just describe what I'm 'hearing.'
"
William Diehl
"You must find some way to elevate your act
of writing...
Usually this means giving the reader an enjoyable surprise. Any
number of methods will do the job: humor, anecdote, an unexpected
quotation, a powerful fact, an outlandish detail, a circuitous
approach, an elegant arrangement of words."
William Zinsser, ON WRITING WELL
"Day by day, you have
to give the work before you
all the best stuff you have, not saving up for later projects,
If you give freely, there will always be more."
Anne Lamott, Bird by Bird
"I believe in getting through the first draft
as quickly as possible. After all, its only purpose is to get
the story told, out and down on paper, imperfect and strange
and disorganized as it might be. Dotting the i's, crossing the
t's, making everything perfect before first getting the story
out will...slow...you...down, and it's important not to slow
down here."
David Michael Kaplin
"Samuel Langhorne Clemens, Jack London, F.
Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, John Steinbeck and dozens
of others ... had one thing in common: They learned their craft
by writing short stories. Only when they had mastered that form
did they undertake the long trek of the novel. The short story
... was the universal school for writers."
Jon Franklin, excerpt from Writing For Story
"I get annoyed when I read a book and it's
about the writer, not about the subject. So it's important to
inject yourself in the story in an appropriate way. I felt it
was appropriate in 'Confederates in the Attic' because I share
this passion for the Civil War; it seemed appropriate to have
me reflecting on this. On the other hand, no one cares what I
had for breakfast in Alabama. You have to be careful not to become
so self-absorbed that
it's just about you. It's a matter of context and balance."
Tony Horwitz, bestselling (and Pulitzer-winning) author of One
for the Road: Hitchhiking Across the Australian Outback
"Never let your characters
relax or feel comfortable in a scene. Remember that people are
not always entirely rational, especially in stress situations.
If you're character's "craziness" seems in character,
consider allowing him to blow up or make some stupid mistake.
Your story people -- even in the toughest scenes -- are not wholly
logical robots.Show clearly that the viewpoint character considers
the oncoming scene as vitally important. Have him say so, or
think so, or both. Never allow a lead character to enter a scene
with a lackadaisical attitude."
Jack M. Bickham
"But the real wonder
of fiction is that it not only appeals to the senses--- it makes
all of your shadow senses receive the world of the story--but
also at its very best it gives us a sixth sense: a sense of the
invisible forces that make people more than the sum of their
five senses."
John Casey, The Writer's Life
"Opening scenes should
be strong...they say if you don't grab the readers with the first
page, first paragraph, first sentence, they will stop reading.
And they will."
Larry Beinhart, How to Write a Mystery
- "Every writer must articulate
from the specific. They must reach down where they stand, because
there is nothing else from which to draw."
- Gloria Naylor, The Writing Life
"In the beginning you
may be writing around what you want to say instead of getting
to the core. Keep writing. The route may be circuitous but after
you zero in on what you truly want to say, you'll see that during
all those false starts and detoured storylines, you weren't wasting
time, as you feared. You were developing as a writer, developing
a discerning eye and ear, finding your own voice, learning to
respect self-imposed dealines."
Madeleine Costigan, Writer June 1998
"In nearly all good
fiction, the basic-- all but inescapable--plot form is: A central
character wants something, goes after it despite opposition,
and so arrives at a win, lose or draw."
John Gardner, On Becoming a Novelist
"It's like
dating --
you have to date before you settle on a husband.
It's the same with agents. I did a lot of "dating"
but now I feel I
found the agent that will benefit me the most."
Rebecca Forster, Her books include Keeping Counsel, Character
Witness, The Mentor and Beyond Malice
"Writing is not competition
to me. Writing is fun and I am simply a storyteller. What I really
enjoy about writing is the self-discipline that it takes to do
it. To me, it is a great challenge, like learning to celestial
navigate or becoming a seaplane pilot. Any man or woman bellied
up to a bar with a few shots of tequila swimming around in their
bloodstream can tell a story. The challenge is to wake up the
next day and carve through the minefield of the hangover and
a million other excuses and be able to cohesively get it on paper."
Jimmy Buffett, Song writer & Novelist
"Ideas are easy. It's
the execution of ideas that really separates the sheep from the
goats. I read newspapers, textbooks on crime. I talk to private
investigators, police officers, jail administrators, doctors,
lawyers, career criminals. Ideas are everywhere."
Sue Grafton
"How can I write a
war novel if I've never been in a war? In fiction, what counts
is not expertise at all, but the illusion of expertise. All art
is illusion, accomplished with stage effects that seem more real
than reality. With enough accurate detail to stay ahead of the
reader, the fiction writer can tackle any subject..."
Arthur Plotnik, Honk if you're a Writer
"I have no theory of
stories, just a theory for each story I write. A particular form
is right for a given story and that's all. I don't like generalizations
about literature -- I think the general is the enemy of the particular
and the particular is the
friend of the writer."
Tobias Wolff
"I take the reporting
side of writing more seriously than the writing side. I think
it really is a lot of work to get things right, so I trained
myself. I sort of take notes the way photographers take photos.
You just sort of scattershot, record everything, because you
never know what's going to prove invaluable..."
Jon Krakauer, author of Into Thin Air
"However, deep are
his profligates' or philanderers' villainy, a good writer will
explain such behavior well enough to 'justify' it in human terms...an
honest story will clarify the reasoning..."
Ben Nyberg, The Best Writing on Writing