L
le_kitty
Guest
I came across this passage in a book I'm going through:
"A painting is never finished. It simply stops in interesting places," said Paul Gardner. A book is never finished. But at a certain point you stop writing it and go on to the next thing. A film is never cut perfectly, but at a certain point you let go and call it done. That is a normal part of creativity - letting go. We always do the best that we can by the light we have to see by.
It seems like that's what we're all picking up on. Unfinished endings, readers wanting more, and re-writing the same scene because we can't let it go.
Food for thought?
"A painting is never finished. It simply stops in interesting places," said Paul Gardner. A book is never finished. But at a certain point you stop writing it and go on to the next thing. A film is never cut perfectly, but at a certain point you let go and call it done. That is a normal part of creativity - letting go. We always do the best that we can by the light we have to see by.
It seems like that's what we're all picking up on. Unfinished endings, readers wanting more, and re-writing the same scene because we can't let it go.
Food for thought?