Oddly enough, the biggest formal help I found for my writing was an Intro to Theatre class, where the professor started in on Aristotle's Poetics. We went into structures of plots, types of characters, how a story builds etc. And I realized, "Wait, I know this! This is obvious!" And, in a new collegiate spurt of pompousness: "I am in touch with Aristotle's brain!" It was a heady moment.
That was when I knew I knew how to write. Every book I've bought since then, every website, etc., I've scanned for some new nugget to attach to what I already know, or is the teacher/guru just off on a new philosophical model? Most books out there are to encourage people who are inhibited to get words on paper, or at least find a paradigm in which to think of writing. I get the feeling, though, that most such books are aimed at journal-type writing, or writing for self-expression, rather than plot-based writing.
I've finally admitted to myself that nothing in any of the books is going to help me find the perfect plot/character/resolution to a tangle, that it's only goign to be solved by my butt in a chair and my fingers on the keys.
And, in a new collegiate spurt of pompousness: "I am in touch with Aristotle's brain!"
Heh. I had a similar moment with both Plato and Aristotle, except my formulation was, "Shit. All that stuff I thought was my view of the world is really just the hand-me-down ideas that Plato and Aristotle generated and have been informing Western culture for thousands of years."
Heh. I had that experience with the Utilitarians. "My God, I've been one all my life!" Americans tend to make Utilitarian arguments reflexively.
I've been lucky in my writing teachers, but I still have to remind myself that when it comes down to it, I have to write what I have to write, not what they would expect or like.edited for WTF?
Connie speaks for me. Though it took me reading enough books to realize there's more than one Right Way to realize it. Many of the books I read early on were big on outlines, systems, and the idea that if you're not driven to write every single day, you're obviously not cut out for this.
The two things that have helped me persist to the point where I'm pretty sure I'm over half finished with my novel are: 1) Diana Gabaldon's website and Outlandish Companion book, which taught me to adopt an "outline, schmoutline" attitude and work on whatever scene is in my head that day, regardless of how out of order I'm working, and 2) hearing on a documentary that Tolkien would put LotR aside for months on end, and that sometimes it took CS Lewis nagging him to get him going again.
Hey, for a hick kid fresh from the boonies, who'd only seen the name Aristotle enshrined in "important" books, it was a big thing. "Yes, my child, you, too, have a working brain capable of philosophical thought." Philosophical thought in Greene County was debating beer and football teams.
if you're not driven to write every single day, you're obviously not cut out for this.
Oh, gods, yes. Yeah, I'd love to write every day, but, you know, the work thing, and the husband who's deeply jealous of my computer, etc. etc.
So, I'm the only one who studiously avoided anything remotely resembling a lit class that so much as mentioned Aristotle, Plato and the utilitarians? I'm the only freak out there who just sits down and writes?
(I'll just be over here with my small X-Fileish stealth craft, boarding to return to my home planet)
I've been trying to do it, but I don't always.I think I need to try though because it's my habit not to take my writing seriously. I was gonna type work but I can only hear that in sarcastic quotes, so...
I'm the only freak out there who just sits down and writes?
Freak! Freak with twelve novels!