Sunday, October 21, 2012

Developing a Voice or Style as a Writer: Creative Writing Lesson Tips 2, by George Wier




This is a wonderful lecture by crime fiction author, George Wier. He suggests, like all successful authors, that to write well you have to read a lot. He makes a valid point that it’s important to read outside of your genre. He states that by reading only in your chose genre, you run the risk of just being a copier of other styles, instead of learning to originate your own unique voice. 

Another good piece of advice he has is that you should just go with the flow, instead of ‘thinking about what you’re writing’. I find I tend to analyze what I’m writing while I’m writing, constantly trying to edit as I write. He sees himself as a reporter of what’s going on in his made up world, so he can just write what’s happening and not get in his own way. I definitely need to take this advice to heart!

He also posits that once you finish writing, before you begin editing, that you should go through and read your work as if you were brand new to it. It helps to minimalize your own self-critic to read your work as if you've just picked it up off the shelf, as if it’s someone else’s work.

No comments:

Post a Comment