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by Jon Morrow
on
Have you ever wished you could peer inside the mind of one of the greatest writers in the world and find out exactly what makes them tick?
Well… here’s your chance.
Stephen King has published 57 novels, all of them bestsellers. He has sold more than 350 million copies of his works. According to Forbes, he earns approximately $40 million per year, making him one of the richest writers in the world.
And now he’s going to tell you exactly how to become a scary good writer.
Sort of.
In 2002, King temporarily abandoned writing horror novels, instead publishing On Writing, a little book chronicling his rise to fame and discussing exactly what he believes it takes to become a good writer. Since then, it’s become the most popular book about writing ever written, pulling in over 1000 reviews on Amazon and selling God only knows how many copies.
Here’s why:
The book is… magic.
I’ve read On Writing from cover to cover at least five times, and each time, I saw a noticeable improvement in my prose. For one, it teaches the fundamentals of the craft, which is something no writer should ignore, but it also sort of rubs off on you.
As you read through King’s life story, you can’t help but see that, to him, writing isn’t a chore. It’s an adventure through undiscovered worlds where no one knows what’ll happen next (not even him).
And it’s contagious.
You can’t read On Writing and not come away with a smile on your face. Where other writing books are focused on the mechanics of the written word, King shows you how to capture the joy of the craft. You’ll find yourself wanting to write, not because of fame or fortune, but because it’s fun, and there’s nothing else you would rather do.
Personally, it’s inspired me more than any other book I’ve ever read, and if I could recommend only one book to writers and bloggers, On Writing would be it. Seriously, need a great gift for the writer or blogger in your life? Get On Writing.
But don’t take my word for it. Below, I’ve collected a monster list of my favorite quotes from the book, and I also wrote down some of my own thoughts on exactly how they apply to writers.
If you enjoy them, grab yourself a copy of On Writing over at Amazon (affiliate link). You won’t regret it.
Here are the quotes:
In the back of their mind, every popular writer harbors the same secret:
Given no other choices, we would happily do what we do for free.
Yes, adulation and prestige that stems from making money as a popular writer is nice, but it’s not what drives us to the keyboard. It’s not what wakes us up in the morning, excited and ready to write. It’s not what keeps us glued to a computer screen for 80% of our day.
No, it’s about the buzz. It’s about the joy. It’s about watching an idea take shape on the page and knowing your audience will love it.
All the other benefits are just a happy bonus.
You know Zig Zigler’s old saying, “You can have everything you want in life, if you help enough other people get what they want?”
Well, it’s pretty much the secret to writing.
If you want more traffic, ask yourself, “What can I give my readers today that would blow their minds? How can I turn their life upside down? What can I say that they couldn’t help but share?”
Answer those questions, and you won’t have to worry about traffic. You’ll get all you can handle.
You want the formula for writing popular blog posts and articles?
Here it is:
Simple, but it takes discipline.
The better you become at cultivating that discipline, the more popular your writing will become.
Oh, but so many of us do.
We think of our blogs as online journals, places to jot down our thoughts, our own little corners of the world where we can say what we think without fear of anyone cutting us off. It’s easy, harmless, fun, so we do it without thinking, without caring, without giving it the respect it really deserves.
Big mistake.
If you want the world to take you seriously, first you have to take yourself seriously. You have to look at your blog as not just a blog but an opportunity to change the world.
And then you have to write as if the whole world is listening.
After a few months or years of writing about the same topic, you might be tempted to feel like there’s nothing else to say. You wonder how you’re going to write a post for the next day, much less the next three or four years.
I’ve been there, and you know what?
It’s nonsense.
Writers don’t run out of ideas. They just become lazy explorers.
The world is full of breathtaking things to write about. Our job as writers is to find them and bring them back to our audience, letting them “Ooh” and “Aah” at our exotic discoveries.
So, get off your ass, and go exploring.
Watch a documentary. Go on a trip. Read a damn book.
Do anything but sit there in front of the computer and wonder what to write next. That’s just pathetic.
A couple years ago, I decided to do a test. I cut my TV time to one show per day and then read for two hours instead.
The result?
My creativity exploded. I went from writing 1,000 words per day to pumping out over 2,000 words per day in the same amount of time.
So, now I’m a believer. Television may be popular, but it’s poisonous to creativity, and all truly dedicated writers need to limit their exposure to it.
Of course, most writers do neither. We start a blog, squeeze in the occasional post between going to the gym and picking up take-out, and then expect it to somehow lead to fame and fortune.
Sorry, but that’s not how it works.
Every popular writer I know reads at least one book every week and writes at least 1,000 words every day.
Yes, it’s a lot, but success comes at a price, folks. Are you willing to pay it?
In our case, it’s not the desk we have to fear, but the smartphone, the tablet, and the laptop, all jangling for our attention, all sucking us in, all immersing us into the world of social media.
And it’s dangerous.
One day you wake up to realize your life is nothing more than a series of digital communications. You wonder, is all that writing and twittering and facebooking really serving you, or are you serving them? Who is the master, and who is the slave?
If you ever find the answer is the latter, disconnect for a while. Social media is supposed to be an echo of your real life, not the other way around. Never forget that.
In school, we are taught writing has three and only three purposes: to inform, to entertain, and to persuade. It’s true, I think, but it’s also missing a subtle requirement:
Transference.
To inform, first you have to be informed. To entertain, first you have to be entertained. To persuade, first you have to be persuaded.
Then and only then are you ready to write.
And when you do, your job isn’t so much jotting down words on the page as beaming the ideas inside your head into the heads of other people. Words are just the medium through which the transfer happens.
Ever stopped to look at the way popular blogs are formatted?
Probably not, unless you’re a total nerd (like me), but give it a try sometime. You’ll notice a surprising pattern:
They all use short paragraphs.
Most of the paragraphs are two or three sentences. Occasionally, they’ll use a one-sentence paragraph to emphasize an important point.
Here’s why:
The shorter your paragraphs are, the less dense and threatening the post looks. It’s a simple thing, but it has a huge impact on how many people stick around and read what you have to say.
A lot of writing books tell you to “write like you talk,” and while I suppose that’s fine for a beginner, it’s death if you ever want to be a respected authority. Yes, your writing should be conversational, but it should be the conversation you would have if you had time to think everything through and say exactly the right things.
The truth is, any great piece of writing is preceded by hours and hours of thinking.
Have more respect for the power of words than to spit them out without any real forethought.
If you’re ever writing a post, and you get stuck, try this:
Write as if no one in the world will ever read it.
Say exactly what you feel. Don’t think. Just get your thoughts out there in all their disheveled, chaotic glory.
This is what Stephen calls writing with the” door closed.” It’s just you and your work, nobody else, and it’s the first stage of writing.
The second stage is opening the door to the rest of the world — a metaphor for pondering how the average Joe might respond to your new creation and making the changes necessary to help it survive.
And yes, there will be changes. Lots and lots of them.
It’s happened to all of us.
You click a link, and you stumble onto somebody’s blog. Not just any blog, mind you, but an extraordinarily crappy one, devoid of any comments, wit, or charm, and yet somehow managing to survive.
When confronted with such a pathetic creature, most people make a bolt for the “Back” arrow, and that’s fine, if you’re just a reader. If you’re a writer, on the other, you’re far better served by sticking around and analyzing exactly what makes the blog so pathetic.
Sure, studying the best is a good way to learn, but so is studying the worst, not because you want to emulate them, but because you begin to “recognize those things as they creep into your own work.”
To many aspiring writers, a great piece of writing is something mystical, filled with almost frightening power, and they look at the writers who create such magic with reverence, maybe even worship, longing for the day when they can discover their closely-guarded “secrets.”
It’s silly.
Yes, there is some magic to it, but the same magic exists in every type of art, and it’s accessible to everyone. Here’s how:
Write. Every day. For years.
Is it hard work?
Yes.
But so is any job worth doing.
If you pay attention to only one quote in this article, pay attention to this one.
Our job as writers isn’t so much saying what we think as putting what our readers think into words, describing it with such clarity and intimacy they suspect us of reading their minds.
Do that, and you won’t have to beg your readers for their attention.
They’ll follow you to the ends of the earth.
Great writing polarizes people.
Some people will love it, and some people hate it. It’s the way you know you’re on the right track.
It’s also the way you know you’re off-track.
If you’re not getting any hate mail, it’s not because you’re the world’s most lovable writer. It’s because you lack the conviction to say anything of substance.
The penalty isn’t death. It’s worse:
Invisibility.
Many a talented writer has been shocked and even silenced when confronted with the seething, almost bestial hatred of critics. You think, “Well, I’ll just ignore it,” but it eats at you, and even if you succeed at not responding (no easy feat), you often find yourself thinking about what the critics will say when you write.
And there are two ways to respond.
You can either shut up, taking what was your unique and wonderful about your work and shuttering it away in a mental closet.
Or, you can fight back, not by criticizing the critic, but by realizing you’re in a war against the status quo, and the only way to fight back is to be delightfully, unapologetically weird.
How do you know when you’re going too far?
You don’t. At least, not at first.
One day, write something so new and different it’s either a work of genius or the stupidest thing conceived in the mind of man. The next, examine your creation to find out which is true.
If it’s stupid, delete it. If it’s genius, publish it.
The mistake most writers make, of course, is never trying anything new at all. They do whatever their English teachers told them is “right.”
And that’s just sad.
Notice he said “use them in your work,” not “let them become your work.”
Including stories about your life in your blog posts and articles is fine and dandy, especially if those stories are interesting, but most writers suffer not from a lack of stories but from an extravagance of them, writing about little nothings that happened to them and somehow expecting these boring trivialities to make them famous.
Sorry, but it doesn’t work that way.
Stories are like condiments. They add flavor, sure enough, but eating them all by themselves is just gross.
And finally, we come to the ray of hope.
You want thousands of loyal readers who love your work and happily tell all their friends to check you out?
You don’t have to be a great writer. In the beginning, you don’t even have to be good.
You just have to be competent.
What, exactly, is “competence?” Here’s my take:
You can write down your thoughts, and people think, “Hmm, that makes sense.”
Maybe you don’t come across as a genius. Maybe your vocabulary is simple. Maybe your grammar isn’t even good enough to get a pass from your high school English teacher.
But you have good ideas.
You can communicate those ideas.
People like what you’re saying.
If you can do those three things, you can work on the rest. No, you’ll probably never win a Pulitzer, but newsflash, I don’t know a single popular writer or blogger who has one of those sitting on their bookshelf.
Most are just merely competent writers who, over the years, got better. They wrote and wrote and wrote and wrote, and one day, they woke up to discover the world liked what they had to say.
The secret, though?
Writing and writing and writing and writing.
The reason most writers fail isn’t a lack of talent or smarts or technical know-how. It’s a refusal to take what they do seriously. They don’t believe their blog can be anything, so they never put in the work to make it anything.
But you’re going to be different, right?
You’re going to commit yourself to learning the craft?
You’re going to sit down and actually write, day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year, until you really and truly get good at this?
You better bet your ass.
If not, I’ll come down there and knock the hell out of ya. 😉
Writing
Jon Morrow