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ON WRITING
As I travel around
promoting my books, I meet many people who are interested
in
the writing process--how I write, when I write, etc. So, briefly, I
will try to
tell those who are themselves trying to write how I go about it.
First
of all, my writing philosophy consists only of trying to tell a good
story. That, I think, is the primary purpose of a storyteller. You
want a protagonist that readers like and can identify with, regardless
of whether the story you are telling is a romance, a mystery, a police
procedural, a thriller, a fantasy or a western. After that, you want to
tell a story that keeps readers turning the pages to find out what happens
next. It should go without saying that you must know the rules of grammar,
punctuation and manuscript preparation. More than
anything, though, you should know your characters so that they do not
say or do anything that is inconsistent with the personalities you have
established for them.
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My writing time is in the mornings and, when I am working on a book, I write
every day,seven days a week in order to keep the story fresh and foremost
in my mind.
I write for three to four hours each day, or until my fingers get too tired
to hit the right
keys. With this schedule, I can write a 400-page manuscript in six or seven
months. I rarely outline a story, preferring to let the characters, through
their dialogue, lead me into and through the story they want to tell. I
do,however, usually have a general idea of how the story will go when I
begin.
All except for the first book, which I started writing without a clue as
to how it would turn out.
The most important advice I can give an aspiring writer is this: You must
write! Thinking about it, researching it, talking and dreaming about it
will never get
it done. You must put words on paper, one after the other, even though
doing
that is lonely, unglamorous and some times pure drudgery. But to be a writer,
you must write.
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