There is so much
on the net about the craft of writing. Some good, some bad. Some good, in my humble opinion, is the
simple advice to read a lot and write a lot. You must do these things to be a
writer. I’ve written this advice myself. Simple but true. If you don’t like to
read, you don’t have much chance of being a writer. You won’t get the nuances
and subtleties of form and structure and language etc… And you have to write.
That’s pretty self-evident. You
can’t finish work if you don’t write. So, internet writerly advice is often “butt
in chair” and “just write” and things like this. While all this is true and, I’d
add, reading up on craft, it’s also true that a lot of writing isn’t done when
you’re writing.
Or, at least, for
me.
A lot of writing
is done when I walk the dog. So I would also advise that you consider this
aspect of writing. Working out characters and what they do and have done to
them is a lot of times accomplished when you’re doing something mindless like
walking the dog. When I sit down to write, I do my best to be in my characters
and their world and I try not to force things upon them. When I do, I usually
head in the wrong direction. So a lot of times when I’m walking the dog, I’m
thinking over questions about the story that have come up because of the
writing I did earlier that day or the day before. There are always a lot of
decisions to be made in any story.
Walking the dog is an excellent time to work on these problems. And it
has an added bonus: it makes your dog happy.
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