lovecraft68
Bad Doggie
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2009
- Posts
- 47,078
The "Kill your darlings" advice is like so much advice established writers put into their "how to" books. It seems they all have to have some sweeping, pithy, memorable advice to give. As others have pointed out, there isn't just one way to write. Yes, some are naturally verbose in draft. But others are naturally terse in draft, using the draft to get the basic plot line down and then filling out and enriching the weaving in review. There's no one road to getting there.
I haven't read Stephen King, but I've done more than read such authors as Tom Clancy and James Michener and they, indeed, were writers who needed to be followed with a hoe and the repeated question, "And what element of the story does this paragraph serve?"
I think-and guessing, no real experience here- that some authors can get to that point people are afraid to edit, especially if the author is not only mega successful, but difficult.
For anyone who read The Mayfair Witches, there is no way anyone is cutting anything Anne Rice writes. Or if they are, I'd hate to see what it is