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13 votes
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Coffee, booze, undressing, deprivation: How writers get in the mood to write
18 votes -
Dear Mr. Borges, which translation should I read?
13 votes -
Romance Writers of America has filed for bankruptcy. What’s next?
16 votes -
“But the ancient Greeks didn’t *sound* Irish…” On capturing voice in historical fiction
12 votes -
The virtue of slow writers
10 votes -
From Red Riding Hood to Beowulf: On the essential role of literary reimaginings
10 votes -
Invisible Ink: At the CIA’s creative writing group
17 votes -
Someone discovered a new pen name used (probably) by Louisa May Alcott in the 1850s
11 votes -
Has it ever been harder to make a living as an author in the Anglosphere?
13 votes -
Jon Fosse: ‘It took years before I dared to write again’
9 votes -
Patrick Rothfuss on the wait for book two of The Kingkiller Chronicle (2009)
27 votes -
Robots are people, too: On the ways writers use non-human characters to tell human stories
11 votes -
Swedish crime novelist Camilla Läckberg has been forced to deny claims that she tricked readers into buying books she didn't write herself
12 votes -
Octavia Butler’s advice on writing, found in recently published Octavia E. Butler: The Last Interview and Other Conversations
12 votes -
Debut novel by Millie Bobby Brown reignites debate over ghostwritten celebrity books
16 votes -
Books about… books? More specifically, books about writing?
Not too long ago, I came across a book that changed my life, or at the very least, my writing. While I have some trouble remembering specifics, I do remember it going deep into the world of...
Not too long ago, I came across a book that changed my life, or at the very least, my writing. While I have some trouble remembering specifics, I do remember it going deep into the world of philosophy and psychology, exploring the intricacies of what makes a book, and what our writing really means. The book analyzed the craft of writing, discussing how humans perceive the differences between good and bad writing, the difference between a good speech and a dull monologue, and how good writing becomes great. This, as well as the nuances of human perception on language in general. Alas, I have since lost the book's title and author, but the captivating writing style and genre remains with me, and I’d really enjoy some recommendations of similar works. I don’t expect to ever find it, as my search has led me to other good books about this sort of writing.
*Please forgive me if this is not the method I should be following when I post, this is my first post here. *
16 votes -
Writing the impossible poem
5 votes -
It's time to come clean
22 votes -
The Beigeness, or How to Kill People with Bad Writing: The Scott Alexander Method
31 votes -
On colonial nostalgia and food in fantasy writing
4 votes -
Do stories need conflict?
In school we teach kids that good stories have conflict and have them fill out plot diagrams, analyzing the different parts relative to the conflict of the story. Every time this comes up, I...
In school we teach kids that good stories have conflict and have them fill out plot diagrams, analyzing the different parts relative to the conflict of the story.
Every time this comes up, I always wonder about its universality. As it's taught to kids, this is "how stories are" and conflict itself is considered essential to storytelling. The conventional wisdom goes that a story without conflict is "boring".
Is this the case, though? It's always felt to me like a very limited way of looking at stories -- fine for children but something that doesn't necessarily scale up past the early stages of literary analysis -- but I don't have anything to back that up. I don't have enough in my repertoire/expertise to really go beyond it, and I'm left with just a sort of empty suspicion that may or may not be justified.
- Is conflict essential to storytelling?
- Are there examples of good stories without conflict?
- Is teaching narrative in this way effective, or limiting?
22 votes -
Novel idea: The Apartment
Just finished (re-)watching the Friends TV series ... End of the last episode, sitting in the empty apartment (Joey: "Has it always been purple?" Phoebe: "Do you realize that at one time or...
Just finished (re-)watching the Friends TV series ... End of the last episode, sitting in the empty apartment (Joey: "Has it always been purple?" Phoebe: "Do you realize that at one time or another, we've all lived in this apartment?")
Got me thinking, more as a plot contrivance than the actual plot, a story about an apartment, spanning a century or more, and the various people that lived in it, jumping back and forth across time, linking them together through history ... perhaps even, a la "Ship of Theseus", spanning multiple centuries and multiple homes/dwellings that occupied the same space.
So specifically, I'm wondering if anyone can think of any novels that adopt this idea, or anything similar, as a primary vehicle for their storytelling?
I have a vague recollection of a short story or novella in 2ndary school, about the life of a redwood, and the various people and animals that lived in and around it over the centuries ... and also I recall reading "A Winter Tale" by Mark Helperin -- a semi-fantastical novel about the city of New York ... oh look, apparently, they made it into a movie, too.
But those two are the only examples I can think of that come close to this idea.
PS: I love to write fiction, and someday I may even finish a novel ... but generally, I get about halfway through, figure out how it's going to end, and then lose interest ... so if anyone with more ambition likes the idea, you're welcome to it.
ETA: I'm not looking for the 10,000 variations of "oooh, haunted by the ghost of a person that died here 20 years ago". Broader, covering a longer timeframe, multiple substories interwoven into the same living space, you get the idea.
10 votes -
Brandon Sanderson: 'After a dozen rejected novels, you think maybe this isn’t for you'
9 votes -
Playlist of all Brandon Sanderson's 2020 Creative Writing Lectures from Brigham Young University
11 votes -
Crafting "Crafting Interpreters"
10 votes -
What authors do you recommend on the basis of writing style?
I'm in the middle of writing my thesis and I've been (re)reading some excellent, unconventional style guides (The Sense of Style by Stephen Pinker and Stylish Academic Writing by Helen Sword). I'm...
I'm in the middle of writing my thesis and I've been (re)reading some excellent, unconventional style guides (The Sense of Style by Stephen Pinker and Stylish Academic Writing by Helen Sword). I'm also rereading Thank You for Arguing by Jay Heinrichs, which is less about style but is essentially a guide for effective communication.
In reading these books and applying their teachings to my writing, I've been reinvigorated with a passion for writing, namely for the craftsmanship of prose. All three books analyze excerpts from examples of great (and sometimes poor) writing. But, I'm now looking for a more immersive experience in good (i.e. stylish, evocative, concise etc.) writing in the hopes that, with my newly refined perspective and sensitivity, I can improve my own writing even more. Good writers read good writing.
Now, starting new books now won't help my current cause (my thesis) but my academic career will call for much more writing in the future. And I'm hoping that maybe the suggestions I get here will help me prioritize my current queue of books and articles—I know they're all great books but I'd like to read the ones with better writing, first.
So, I would love some recommendations on authors who you would consider as masters of writing. It can be either books or articles. Preferably non-fiction and modern (20 years?), only because fiction and older books have different standards (FWIW I love old-school sci-fi, but that's definitely not the style I'm after). My current shortcut is to read basically any "longread" on WIRED, as most of the time they are high quality and often explain complex topics.
Any other resources are also welcome! Though maybe no more style guides...
12 votes -
On the line between truth and fiction when writing about your family
8 votes -
Fascinated to Presume: In defense of fiction
3 votes -
How to be a professional author and not die screaming and starving in a lightless abyss
15 votes -
Head cases - Field notes on a beautiful friendship
5 votes -
'My nerves are going fast': The Grapes of Wrath’s hard road to publication
3 votes -
Ta-Nehisi Coates talks to Jesmyn Ward about writing fiction, reparations, and the legacy of slavery
4 votes -
How to write about Africa
6 votes -
Binyavanga Wainaina: 'How to write about Africa'
2 votes -
A poetry-writing AI has just been unveiled. It’s ... pretty good.
10 votes -
The rise of robot authors: Is the writing on the wall for human novelists?
4 votes -
When 80 famous writers published their first (and last) books. OR: who has had the longest career.
4 votes -
Five emerging Australian authors talk about writing their breakthrough novels
7 votes -
Last Lines of a Few Great Books
4 votes -
Must writers be moral? Their contracts may require it
8 votes -
“Devil Girl from Mars”: Why I Write Science Fiction (1998)
6 votes -
Myths, monsters and the maze: How writers fell in love with the labyrinth
2 votes -
Drawn from life: Why have novelists stopped making things up?
6 votes -
'The Expanse' co-author Daniel Abraham tells the inside story about sci-fi books, TV … and politics
8 votes -
V.E. Schwab's speech, "In Search of Doors" at Pembroke Tolkien Lecture 2018
4 votes