Quotes on Writing

Grushenka

Literotica Guru
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I like Rukeyser's quote best.
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The Visual Thesaurus: Word Count - Writers Talk About Writing
Quotable Quotes on Writing By Daphne Gray-Grant​

One of my nerdy little hobbies is collecting quotes about writing by famous authors. But I just don't collect them -- I read them, regularly. I find that reading a good quote is a bit like a shot of Vitamin B, or, even, a splash of cold water in the face. It energizes you -- by helping you resolve to do better. At other times, a pithy quote is more like a tour guide pointing out an important bit of scenery in a strange country. "Oh, that's what I should be noticing," you say to yourself. Finally, the telling quote can also be a laugh line -- a chance to guffaw at your own writing foibles (much more effective than crying over them). Here are eight of my favorite quotes, collected over the last year:

Winston Churchill knew a thing or three about the high-stakes game of persuasive writing. Here is his well honed advice: If you have an important point to make, don't try to be subtle or clever. Use a pile driver. Hit the point once. Then come back and hit it again. Then hit it a third time -- a tremendous whack.

English schoolmaster Henry Watson Fowler (1858-1933) and his brother, the writer Francis George Fowler (1871-1918), devoted their lives to encouraging people to write more clearly and directly. If you don't have time to read their intimidating (but wonderful) book Modern English Usage, here's a maxim to keep posted beside your computer: Anyone who wishes to become a good writer should endeavor, before he allows himself to be tempted by the more showy qualities, to be direct, simple, brief, vigorous and lucid.

Muriel Rukeyser (1913 to 1980) was an American poet and political activist. And I suppose it would take a poet to express such a profound thought in so few words: The world is not made up of atoms; it's made up of stories.

Cyril Edwin Mitchinson Joad (1891 to 1953) was an English philosopher and broadcasting personality famous for his appearance on the BBC program The Brains Trust in which experts debated questions such as "what is the meaning of life?" He had a deep egalitarian streak, which you can see in this quote about writing. (I agree with his sentiment so profoundly that I'm almost prepared to forgive him for a 77-word sentence): All the talk about style and form and quality of expression in writing which agitates literary circles is simply highfalutin' bunkum, designed to hoodwink people into the belief that writing is much more mysterious than it really is, by those whose living depends on the maintenance of the mystery, and that if the plain man would only take the trouble to say quite plainly what he thinks, good and even easy writing would be the inevitable result.

Whenever I am tempted to overwrite, get too flowery or obfuscate, I schedule a fast remedial reading of the masterpiece Politics and the English Language by writer and journalist George Orwell (1903-1950). Still, for brevity, it's hard to beat his seven-word piece of advice: Good prose is like a window pane.

I'm not typically an Andy Rooney fan. I've always found his little homilies on the TV show 60 Minutes a bit too precious and his delivery bordering on self-parody. But every once in awhile, he hits the mark, as he does here: Keep in mind that you're more interested in what you have to say than anyone else.

Contemporary American writer Annie Dillard can be counted on to both comfort and uplift writers who are in trouble. Here is what she has to say about getting in the writing "zone." At its best, the sensation of writing is that of an unmerited grace. It is handed to you, but only if you look for it. You search, you break your heart, your back, your brain, and then -- and only then -- is it handed to you.

Many years ago I gave a dinner party at which a friend performed an impromptu reading from the book Metropolitan Life by humorist Fran Lebowitz. I remember laughing so hard, I started to worry about whether I could continue breathing. Whenever I hit the writing wall, and when all else fails, I can cheer myself immeasurably by remembering her sage advice: I hate writing. I will do anything to avoid it. The only way I could write less is if I was dead.
 
Grushenka said:
I like Rukeyser's quote best.
That and the Orwell quote--ironic that he wrote that, given how his stories were ones with a strong author's message. All us writers have points of view and our own biases, but, IMHO, the best writing really is like a window pane, clear of all those smudges and dirt that are the writer's own prejudices. I don't mean that the writer deliberately tries to hide his feelings and thoughts, either, but that the characters and story were so real to the writer, that all the writer is able to do is do was tell the story, not lecture on their beliefs.

This is why Shakespeare still has people wondering about him, the author: "Was he a secret Catholic? A homosexual? A nobleman? A woman?" Because you pass right through him into his stories. So little of him seems to be there, on the window pane.

The best stories are the ones where it seems like you're viewing the story through a window, and you've no idea what the writer of that story is really like. You only know that you are there, in that story, with those characters.
 
I like the Fowler quote the best. It's what I strive for when writing.

Professor Joad's quote sums up my feelings about 'the experts' quite nicely.
 
3113 said:
. . . Because you pass right through him into his stories. So little of him seems to be there, on the window pane.

The best stories are the ones where it seems like you're viewing the story through a window, and you've no idea what the writer of that story is really like. You only know that you are there, in that story, with those characters.
Very well put. I know this experience, it's why I love reading. Thanks for the post.
 
rgraham666 said:
Professor Joad's quote sums up my feelings about 'the experts' quite nicely.
Yep. Makes me want to use "highfalutin' bunkum" about some critic's work. :)
 
"I hate writing and love having written"
-Joan Didion

"I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter."
-Blaise Pascal

"The difference between fiction and reality? Fiction has to make sense."
-Tom Clancy (many variants on this theme)

"Any man who afflicts the human race with ideas must be prepared to see them misunderstood."
-H. L. Mencken
 
Martin Amis: "As for the snooker, well, to approach televisual ideal, by which we all measure ourselves, I’d have to do nothing else for the rest of my life. Then snooker might work out and measure up, with everything going where you want it to go, at the right weight and angle. Then snooker might feel like writing.”
 
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