Advanced Essay Writing: Style and Styles in Prose Rotating Header Image

SOME THOUGHTS ON WRITING

I wanted to share this with everyone because I love to read about other artist talking about their craft and lives.   

SOME THOUGHTS ON WRITING

Elizabeth Gilbert

Sometimes people ask me for help or suggestions about how to write, or how to get published. Keeping in mind that this is all very ephemeral and personal, I will try to explain here everything that I believe about writing. I hope it is useful. It’s all I know.

I believe that if you are serious about a life of writing, or indeed about any creative form of expression that you should take on this work like a holy calling. I became a writer the way other people become monks or nuns. I made a vow to writing, very young. I became Bride-of-Writing. I was writing’s most devotional handmaiden. I built my entire life around writing. I didn’t know how else to do this. I didn’t know anyone who had ever become a writer. I had no, as they say, connections. I had no clues. I just began.

I took a few writing classes when I was at NYU, but, aside from an excellent workshop taught by Helen Schulman, I found that I didn’t really want to be practicing this work in a classroom. I wasn’t convinced that a workshop full of 13 other young writers trying to find their voices was the best place for me to find my voice. So I wrote on my own, as well. I showed my work to friends and family whose opinions I trusted. I was always writing, always showing. After I graduated from NYU, I decided not to pursue an MFA in creative writing. Instead, I created my own post-graduate writing program, which entailed several years spent traveling around the country and world, taking jobs at bars and restaurants and ranches, listening to how people spoke, collecting experiences and writing constantly. My life probably looked disordered to observers (not that anyone was observing it that closely) but my travels were a very deliberate effort to learn as much as I could about life, expressly so that I could write about it.

Back around the age of 19, I had started sending my short stories out for publication. My goal was to publish something (anything, anywhere) before I died. I collected only massive piles of rejection notes for years. I cannot explain exactly why I had the confidence to be sending off my short stories at the age of 19 to, say, The New Yorker, or why it did not destroy me when I was inevitably rejected. I sort of figured I’d be rejected. But I also thought: “Hey somebody has to write all those stories: why not me?” I didn’t love being rejected, but my expectations were low and my patience was high. (Again the goal was to get published before death. And I was young and healthy.) It has never been easy for me to understand why people work so hard to create something beautiful, but then refuse to share it with anyone, for fear of criticism. Wasn’t that the point of the creation to communicate something to the world? So PUT IT OUT THERE. Send your work off to editors and agents as much as possible, show it to your neighbors, plaster it on the walls of the bus stops just don’t sit on your work and suffocate it. At least try. And when the powers-that-be send you back your manuscript (and they will), take a deep breath and try again. I often hear people say, “I’m not good enough yet to be published.” That’s quite possible. Probable, even. All I’m saying is: Let someone else decide that. Magazines, editors, agents they all employ young people making $22,000 a year whose job it is to read through piles of manuscripts and send you back letters telling you that you aren’t good enough yet: LET THEM DO IT. Don’t pre-reject yourself. That’s their job, not yours. Your job is only to write your heart out, and let destiny take care of the rest.

As for discipline it’s important, but sort of over-rated. The more important virtue for a writer, I believe, is self-forgiveness. Because your writing will always disappoint you. Your laziness will always disappoint you. You will make vows: “I’m going to write for an hour every day,” and then you won’t do it. You will think: “I suck, I’m such a failure. I’m washed-up.” Continuing to write after that heartache of disappointment doesn’t take only discipline, but also self-forgiveness (which comes from a place of kind and encouraging and motherly love). The other thing to realize is that all writers think they suck. When I was writing “Eat, Pray, Love”, I had just as a strong a mantra of THIS SUCKS ringing through my head as anyone does when they write anything. But I had a clarion moment of truth during the process of that book. One day, when I was agonizing over how utterly bad my writing felt, I realized: “That’s actually not my problem.” The point I realized was this I never promised the universe that I would write brilliantly; I only promised the universe that I would write. So I put my head down and sweated through it, as per my vows.

I have a friend who’s an Italian filmmaker of great artistic sensibility. After years of struggling to get his films made, he sent an anguished letter to his hero, the brilliant (and perhaps half-insane) German filmmaker Werner Herzog. My friend complained about how difficult it is these days to be an independent filmmaker, how hard it is to find government arts grants, how the audiences have all been ruined by Hollywood and how the world has lost its taste…etc, etc. Herzog wrote back a personal letter to my friend that essentially ran along these lines: “Quit your complaining. It’s not the world’s fault that you wanted to be an artist. It’s not the world’s job to enjoy the films you make, and it’s certainly not the world’s obligation to pay for your dreams. Nobody wants to hear it. Steal a camera if you have to, but stop whining and get back to work.” I repeat those words back to myself whenever I start to feel resentful, entitled, competitive or unappreciated with regard to my writing: “It’s not the world’s fault that you want to be an artist…now get back to work.” Always, at the end of the day, the important thing is only and always that: Get back to work. This is a path for the courageous and the faithful. You must find another reason to work, other than the desire for success or recognition. It must come from another place.

Here’s another thing to consider. If you always wanted to write, and now you are A Certain Age, and you never got around to it, and you think it’s too late…do please think again. I watched Julia Glass win the National Book Award for her first novel, “The Three Junes”, which she began writing in her late 30’s. I listened to her give her moving acceptance speech, in which she told how she used to lie awake at night, tormented as she worked on her book, asking herself, “Who do you think you are, trying to write a first novel at your age?” But she wrote it. And as she held up her National Book Award, she said, “This is for all the late-bloomers in the world.” Writing is not like dancing or modeling; it’s not something where if you missed it by age 19 you’re finished. It’s never too late. Your writing will only get better as you get older and wiser. If you write something beautiful and important, and the right person somehow discovers it, they will clear room for you on the bookshelves of the world at any age. At least try.

There are heaps of books out there on How To Get Published. Often people find the information in these books contradictory. My feeling is — of COURSE the information is contradictory. Because, frankly, nobody knows anything. Nobody can tell you how to succeed at writing (even if they write a book called “How To Succeed At Writing”) because there is no WAY; there are, instead, many ways. Everyone I know who managed to become a writer did it differently sometimes radically differently. Try all the ways, I guess. Becoming a published writer is sort of like trying to find a cheap apartment in New York City: it’s impossible. And yet…every single day, somebody manages to find a cheap apartment in New York City. I can’t tell you how to do it. I’m still not even entirely sure how I did it. I can only tell you through my own example that it can be done. I once found a cheap apartment in Manhattan. And I also became a writer.

In the end, I love this work. I have always loved this work. My suggestion is that you start with the love and then work very hard and try to let go of the results. Cast out your will, and then cut the line. Please try, also, not to go totally freaking insane in the process. Insanity is a very tempting path for artists, but we don’t need any more of that in the world at the moment, so please resist your call to insanity. We need more creation, not more destruction. We need our artists more than ever, and we need them to be stable, steadfast, honorable and brave they are our soldiers, our hope. If you decide to write, then you must do it, as Balzac said, “like a miner buried under a fallen roof.” Become a knight, a force of diligence and faith. I don’t know how else to do it except that way. As the great poet Jack Gilbert said once to young writer, when she asked him for advice about her own poems: “Do you have the courage to bring forth this work? The treasures that are hidden inside you are hoping you will say YES.”

Good luck.

A Glimpse of Jimi

The following I think is a fantastic piece of writing.  Everytime I read it over I wish that it was I who experienced Hendrix myself.  The language and references the author uses (e.g. eroticism and references to other greats) makes me feel I missed one of the most significant experiences in human history, perhaps I have…

He was dusty — he had cobwebs and dust all over him. He was a very unremarkable-looking guy with an old military jacket on that was pretty dirty. It looked like he’d maybe slept in it a few nights running. When he would walk toward the stage, nobody would really take much notice of him. But when he walked off, I saw him walk up to some of the most covetable women in the world. Hendrix would snap his fingers, and they followed him. Onstage, he was very erotic as well. To a man watching, he was erotic like Mick Jagger is erotic. It wasn’t “You know, I’d like to take that guy in the bathroom and fuck him.” It was a high form of eroticism, almost spiritual in quality. There was a sense of wanting to possess him and wanting to be a part of him, to know how he did what he did because he was so powerfully affecting. Johnny Rotten did it, Kurt Cobain did it. As a man, you wanted to be a part of Johnny Rotten’s gang, you wanted to be a part of Kurt Cobain’s gang.

He was shy and kind and sweet, and he was fucked up and insecure. If you were as lucky as I was, you’d spend a few hours with him after a gig and watch him descend out of this incredibly colorful, energized face. There was also something quite sad about watching him. There was a hedonism about him. Toward the end of his life, he seemed to be having fun, but maybe a little bit too much. It was happening to a lot of people, but it was sad to see it happen to him.

With Jimi, I didn’t have any envy. I never had any sense that I could ever come close. I remember feeling quite sorry for Eric, who thought that he might actually be able to emulate Jimi. I also felt sorry that he should think that he needed to. Because I thought Eric was wonderful anyway. Perhaps I make assumptions here that I shouldn’t, but it’s true. Once — I think it was at a gig Jimi played at the Scotch of St. James [in London] — Eric and I found ourselves holding each other’s hands. You know, what we were watching was so profoundly powerful.

The author does such a good job of describing the magic that is Jimi Hendrix but it makes me wonder.  Is it the author’s skill with the pen or the subject that draws me to this piece?

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Writers Block

I just love this quote from Cyril Edwin Mitchinson Joad. He was an English Philosopher and broadcasting personality. I came across the quote randomly in a google search some time back. I’ve never read any of his books but I don’t need to read them to appreciate this great quote. Whenever I sit down to write and the writing feels like it’s much bigger than me, I turn to this quote:

All the talk about style and form and quality of expression in writing which agitates literary circles is simply highfalutin’ bunkum, designed to hoodwink people into the belief that writing is much more mysterious than it really is, by those whose living depends on the maintenance of the mystery, and that if the plain man would only take the trouble to say quite plainly what he thinks, good and even easy writing would be the inevitable result.

And once I get into my groove and start writing but I’m still stumbling a little, I also turn to this great quote by Winston Churchill:

If you have an important point to make, don’t try to be subtle or clever. Use a pile driver. Hit the point once. Then come back and hit it again. Then hit it a third time — a tremendous whack.

What’s happening to music?

I noticed that Joanna put up a blog in which she said that lyrics are a form of writing. I agree with her but with some reservations.

Has anyone really sat down and listened to contemporary music lately?

It is complete gargbage!

You don’t have to go far to hear it either; try listening to any of NYC’s popular radio stations and I’m sure that you will be convinced. So even though the lyrics of musicare a form of art there must be something fundamentally different about it. Any thoughts?

I often find myself tuning to the AM stations and listening to 1010 WINS because I’m afraid to get dumber from this stuff.

Found a cool link to some of the worst lyrics:

 http://www.spinner.com/2007/03/27/the-wo…

Check out these top 20

Personal favorites from that list have to be:

1. “Young, black and famous

With money hangin’

Out the anus”

from Puff Daddy and Mase’s “Can’t Nobody Hold Me Down”

2. “Now you’re amazed
By the VIP posse
Steppin’ so hard
Like a German Nazi”

from Vanilla Ice’s  “Play That Funky Music” ( I was not aware that comparing yourself to a Nazi is cool these days)

3. “I don’t like cities

But I like New York

Other places

Make me feel like a dork”

from Madonna’s “I Love New York”  (I know it rhymes but come on!)

Cultural thing?

Because the semester is almost over I decided to go and buy a book and start reading something to entertain myself before sleep. Ususall, I get books that people recomend me and usually, it works. This time I had no recommendations at all and I was standing in the bookstore wondering which book I should get, and it was worse than shopping, there are so many choices! Finally, I started thinking what would interest me the most or what I usually read and I realized that my interests are geographically devided. I thought about the books I enjoyed the most and they came up to be all from Spanish-speaking authors. I think their writing is very smooth, and outgoing, and relaxed. They seemed to be written for a friend without losing the formality and beauty of the speech. I don’t want to say that not Spanish-cultured writers are different from the rest of the world writes, but for example I find Russian writers to be colder, and more straight forward and precise in their writings. Maybe it’s a cultural thing, I don’t know.

word choice

While I was in the CDC I came across this article in the Wall Street Journal: Do Discount Designer Duds Make the Grade?

There is a picture of a dress from Barney’s on the left and a raincoat from Target on the right. The caption for the picture:

“A dress by Thakoon Panichgul bought from Barney’s New York for 1,145 (left). On the right is a raincoat retailing for $45 that the designer put together for Target.”

The first sentence is in passive voice and the second is in active voice. I think the person who wrote this did this on purpose. The first sentence talks about the dress being bought and the second one talks about how the raincoat is made. To me writing like this makes the dress look better than the raincoat. The words put together gives me the image of something thrown together. Do you think the writer chose to write different types of sentences to create an opinion for the reader or am I just over analyzing things?

I want pity

I’m going to take advantage of blog’s diary roots and vent here.  I’m pretty much devastated.  I applied for the Harman Writer in Residence class before the Fall 09 schedule was up on Blackboard and later found out that it conflicts with two marketing classes that I need to take if I plan to graduate on time.  I told myself it was okay… that there were only 4 spots in the class and that the decision would thankfully be made for me by an email reading “We regret to inform you that…”

BUT NO!

I got it.  I admit I’m a tiny bit proud of myself- come on! only 4 spots! – but overall I’m so, so upset that I’m going to have to turn the class down. 
I;m goign to post the class description so you guys can sympathize:

“CONSIDERING MANY FORMS OF STORYTELLING–FROM RAP TO
19TH CENTURY BALLADS, FROM THE SCREENPLAY AND THE SHORT
STORY TO THE LITERARY NOVEL–THIS FICTION WRITING
WORKSHOP WILL LOOK AT THE SECRETS OF NARRATIVE TECH-
NIQUE. THIS IS A COURSE THAT WILL CONSIDER BOB DYLAN AS
GREAT A STORYTELLER AS JAMES JOYCE, SCORSESE AS GREAT
AS SALINGER. WE WILL READ FLANNERY O’CONNOR, RAYMOND
CARVER, BARACK OBAMA, MUDDY WATERS, RICHARD FORD AND
OTHER FINE STORY TELLERS. CONSIDERING MANY FORMS OF STORYTELLING–FROM RAP TO
19TH CENTURY BALLADS, FROM THE SCREENPLAY AND THE SHORT
STORY TO THE LITERARY NOVEL–THIS FICTION WRITING
WORKSHOP WILL LOOK AT THE SECRETS OF NARRATIVE TECH-
NIQUE. THIS IS A COURSE THAT WILL CONSIDER BOB DYLAN AS
GREAT A STORYTELLER AS JAMES JOYCE, SCORSESE AS GREAT
AS SALINGER. WE WILL READ FLANNERY O’CONNOR, RAYMOND
CARVER, BARACK OBAMA, MUDDY WATERS, RICHARD FORD AND
OTHER FINE STORY TELLERS. “

Doesn’t it sound awesome?!

Ugh.

Many congratulations to Anna, who was also one of the four.

What about lyrics?

We talk about good writing on blog but what about lyrics. They are the art of writing as well.

Yesterday we have some music lessons which I really enjoy. This different tone, energy, and speed express in one piece of music is fascinating. Lyrics and music together is an amazing enyojment.  You  can hear the music  and you can hear  the words.

One of my  favorites lyrics is ,” Dance me to the end of love” by Leonard Cohen. Actually, this is his poem which he puts with music and creats a beatiful song.  

 

Dance me to your beauty with a burning violin
Dance me through the panic ?til I?m gathered safely in
Lift me like an olive branch and be my homeward dove
Dance me to the end of love
Dance me to the end of love

Oh let me see your beauty when the witnesses are gone
Let me feel you moving like they do in babylon
Show me slowly what I only know the limits of
Dance me to the end of love
Dance me to the end of love
Me to the wedding now, dance me on and on
Dance me very tenderly and dance me very long
We?re both of us beneath our love, we?re both of us above
Dance me to the end of love
Dance me to the end of love

Dance me to the children who are asking to be born
Dance me through the curtains that our kisses have outworn
Raise a tent of shelter now, though every thread is torn
Dance me to the end of love

Dance me to your beauty with a burning violin
Dance me through the panic till I?m gathered safely in
Touch me with your naked hand or touch me with your glove
Dance me to the end of love
Dance me to the end of love
Dance me to the end of love

humor

1. You spend the first two years of their life teaching them to walk and talk. Then you spend the next sixteen telling them to sit down and shut up.

2. Grandchildren are God’s reward for not killing your own children.

3. Mothers of teens now know why some animals eat their young.

 4. Children seldom misquote you. In fact, they usually repeat word for word what you shouldn’t have said.

 5. The main purpose of holding children’s parties is to remind yourself that there are children more awful than your own.

 6. We childproofed our homes, but they are still getting in.

 ADVICE FOR THE DAY: Be nice to your kids. They will choose your nursing home one day.

AND FINALLY: IF YOU HAVE A LOT OF TENSION AND YOU GET A HEADACHE, DO WHAT IT SAYS ON THE ASPIRIN BOTTLE:

“TAKE TWO ASPIRIN” AND “KEEP AWAY FROM CHILDREN”!!!!!

 I thought this piece was very funny I found it online and thought that maybe humor writing comes from stating the truth but making it the obvious.

Hi Guys

Does anyone knows where can i find the restaurants reviews we have to read. I can not find them

Thank you,

America