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“I was filled with creative desire, I set my mommy’s house on fire…”

Every so often, I bump into aspiring writers who say they can’t imagine why anyone would read or write a blog. Me, I don’t understand why anyone would pay to fill their shelves with books about writing when a host of smart journalists, novelists, professors, and other pros have moved much of the conversation online. It’s never been easier to gab about the creative process or to learn about writing as a business, and folks are just giving away the wisdom. Behold…

Literary agent Nathan Bransford descends from the mountaintop with the Ten Commandments for the Happy Writer. (The smartest one is number five: “Don’t quit your day job.”)

Writer C.M. Mayo compiles a list “to all the many people who ask me to read their manuscripts.”

Novelist J.A. Konrath outlines the differences between a confident writer and a delusional writer. (Link via Steven Hart, who has some pithy advice of his own: read, study, understand.)

Margaret Soltan ponders why writing is often “acutely unpleasant.”

Novelist Leslie Pietrzyk spends a day “writing uncomfortably.”

Olen Steinhauer wonders how other writers find the time and notes that the day his new novel came out was not “particularly raucous.”

Monday, March 9, 2009, 12:49 am in writing | 2 Comments »

2 responses to “I was filled with creative desire, I set my mommy’s house on fire…”

  1. # 1 - John Curry wrote:
    Friday, March 13, 2009, at 5:55 am

    Thanks, Jeff; wonderful links.

  2. # 2 - On the Web wrote:
    Monday, March 23, 2009, at 8:05 am

    […] Jeff Sypeck: Every so often, I bump into aspiring writers who say they can’t imagine why anyone would read or […]

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