posted
First of all, I credit JeanneT for turning me on to George R.R. Martin. I am almost done with the 2nd Ice and Fire novel and they are fantastic.
Okay, I just heard the GRRM podcast where he gives advice to aspiring writers. His three points of advice are as follows:
1. Write short stories: (Paraphrase) If you write a bad short story, you've only wasted a month or two. If you write a bad novel, you may have wasted a year or two. Plus, if you have some writing credentials, it may be a lot easier to sell that first novel. He recommended 5-6 years of publishing short stories before a novel.
3. Don't quit your day job: He apologized for having to add this one, but writing is a tough gig. Even many professional writers have a tough time making ends meet.
[This message has been edited by psnede (edited August 24, 2008).]
[This message has been edited by psnede (edited August 24, 2008).]
posted
Thanks for posting this. I had never read Heinlein's rules, and the advice to write short stories is very pertinent to me. I already knew not to quit my day-job, but sound advice all the same.
Posts: 2003 | Registered: Jul 2008
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posted
Thank you so much for posting that link. I read it and had to think of where I want to be in a year.
Do I want to still be talking about writing my novel or do I want to have written and sent off my novel. Either way a year will have gone by and it's up to me to figure out how to use that time.
posted
I haven't read it yet, much as I've liked and been influenced by George Railroad's earlier work. I was waiting for it to be complete.
On "Don't quit your day job"---sound advice, but I gotta say, my prolific period ended when I went out into the working world. I wrote better, but less often---and the novels I finished writing usually took years of work...
posted
My strategy for becoming a published writer has been to practise and hopefully establish a name with short stories first, then progress to novels.
With the short stories I've often elected to explore a particular aspect of story telling with each piece. One focused on character development, a couple on developing romantic relationships, a couple on presenting both sides of a moral argument authentically, others on plot, action, milieu and so forth.
One lesson I've learned in reviewing my WIPS in preparation for the Ready for Market challenge is that as a result of this strategy, I now have several stories in progress, each with some strengths and many weaknesses--because in each I focused on just one or a few aspects.
I don't regret that strategy, I think I've learned much. But now I'm facing up to either polishing each story into something marketable, or combining some of them into bigger, stronger stories.
I think one or two will get polished up to stand alone, while others will be combined together because they (can be made to) address common themes and their milieus can be fused together ... I'm pleased to find that I think this will actually be fun, not a drudge, because they'll be major rewrites with broader canvas, and thus should generate some fresh energy ...