More writing rules

Earlier this week, I read White Oleander author Janet Fitch’s “10 rules for writers” on Jacket Copy, the Los Angeles Times blog about “all things bookish.” I especially liked her advice for scenes. “A scene starts in one place emotionally and ends in another place emotionally. Starts angry, ends embarrassed. Starts lovestruck, ends disgusted,” she wrote. “Something happens in a scene, whereby the character cannot go back to the way things were before.”

Fitch put together great tips, and, as I’ve mentioned on this blog before, I’m a sucker for these kinds of lists, even when they go on for pages, as in the uber-list of writing rules.

Today, as I was editing articles for the reprint of our special issue The Writer’s Guide to Fiction, I reacquainted myself with Fear of Flying author Erica Jong’s fun approach to writing rules, which we originally ran in our December 2003 issue. Check them out:


21 rules for writers

1. Have faith—not cynicism.

2. Dare to dream.

3. Take your mind off publication.

4. Write for joy.

5. Get the reader to turn the page.

6. Forget politics (let your real politics shine through).

7. Forget intellect.

8. Forget ego.

9. Be a beginner.

10. Accept change.

11. Don’t think your mind needs altering.

12. Don’t expect approval for telling the truth.

13. Use everything.

14. Remember that writing is dangerous if it’s any good.

15. Let sex (the body and the physical world) in!

16. Forget critics.

17. Tell our truth, not the world’s.

18. Remember to be earth-bound.

19. Remember to be wild!

20. Write for the child (in yourself and in others).

21. There are no rules.


What stands out for me are rules two, three and four: Dare to dream. Take your mind off publication. Write for joy.

We often receive questions from aspiring writers who get wrapped up in legal or marketing scenarios for projects they haven’t completed yet—and sometimes haven’t even started. It’s important to hold the dream of publication or writing success—whatever that may mean to you—close to your heart. Maybe just thinking of your name on the spine of a book can keep you going when the writing gets tough. But in the meantime, as you’re working on your writing, please set aside publication concerns that only serve to distract you from your real task. Instead, focus on the joy of writing, on your passion for your book, story, poem, essay, whatever it may be. Then, when it’s finished, and you’ve made it the best it can be, you can start thinking about sharing it with the rest of the world.

—Sarah C. Lange, associate editor

P.S. The Writer’s Guide to Fiction will be available only on newsstands in October. It’s packed with terrific advice for writing and publishing short stories and novels, including literary agent Noah Lukeman’s piece about sending your character on a profound journey and Pulitzer Prize winner Robert Olen Butler’s article on the driving force behind plot. I love this special issue, and I promise you that I’m not saying this just because I work for the magazine!

P.P.S. Yes, I went to Catholic grade school. No, a nun never hit my hand with a ruler.

 

Comments

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mother's happy child wrote re: More writing rules
on Sat, Jul 17 2010 1:53 PM

How about pulling on your pony-tail?

Thanks for the info on the coming attraction.

MHC

 
 
 
Sarah C. Lange wrote re: More writing rules
on Mon, Jul 19 2010 9:17 AM

You're welcome, MHC.

My teachers didn't pull hair, either! :) They could be strict, but they encouraged us to study hard, read for fun, and get creative. I remember the school librarian, a tiny elderly nun, used to knit "bookworms" to sell at the school fair. They were all the rage.

 
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