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#31 | ||
cacoethes scribendi
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When it comes right down to it, for a lot of people the hardest part of writing is the thing that seems the simplest: actually sitting down and writing. If you get all clogged up worrying about grammar and spelling you may never start, you may never find that experience that takes over when it starts to work. You may never find out if you like it, whether it is therapeutic for you. And you may never find out whether you can tell an effective story - and that's what counts. Much of what remains is technical detail that can be dealt with later. Quote:
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#32 | ||
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
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I think you mistake my point. I have zero issues with anyone just sitting down and getting "it all out there." I have fewer issues with the occasional typo, grammar mistake, etc. Your point: Quote:
I, for one, can't bring myself to buy a book with a dreadful description (nowadays, constantly, annoyingly and frustratingly misnamed a "blurb") or "wince-y" mistakes in the first page of the LITB. I can't do it. It's like this: with so many books to choose from, why deliberately choose one that will inflict pain? If an author cares so little for my opinion that they'll put up dreck in the first 1300 words, then I can't be bothered--EITHER. I expect the author to at LEAST put as much effort into cleaning up the damned thing as I will put into reading it. It's a matter of respect for your PAYING audience. If the writer doesn't want to do that work, fine, put it up on Scribd or Wattpad or SW for free. Then I shan't care. But as in all other things, when it comes to "you pays your money, you takes your chances," I'm only willing to take chances, on PAID-FOR writing, that at least looks like someone gave a crap. The following contains my RANT about Indy publishers who think that their education should be funded by my pennies; feel cheerfully free to ignore: Spoiler:
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#33 | |
“Here’s Johnny
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![]() I think you've made some great points here. My only exclusion would be critique groups. I've personally seen people get slammed by said groups by "Authors" whose claim to fame is a 15 page children s book with fewer total words than this paragraph. In my own field I've had to fix the work of amateurs and that's ok' because as I've told them it's ok not be able to do everything, that's why the make professionals. |
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#34 |
Surfin the alpha waves ~~
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I've been in a "writers' group" for about a year, and it has been very valuable to me. It's an interesting group, since I'm the only one there primarily interested in writing fiction. Sometimes their "criticism" is a bit off base (but I told them at the start that I have an unrealistically resilient ego and I want to hear every comment and viewpoint), and sometimes they have a different vision of the story than I do -- but even in the most off-base critique I've been able to find something useful.
Overall, I recommend it. Last edited by cromag; 12-06-2014 at 10:51 PM. |
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#35 | |
cacoethes scribendi
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@Hitch and @Jack - one of the places where people often cross wires on this subject is the distinction between what a writer needs to do to get better and writing, and what is acceptable in actually published work. A writer has to write in order to learn how to be a better writer - it seems obvious, but many seem to miss it. That doesn't mean that everything a writer writes should be published (this isn't even true of the "greats"), and it certainly doesn't mean that anything they write should be published without first being suitably polished.
The fact that so many skip or skimp on the polishing step is why people may think that advising a person to just get in and start writing can be a mistake. But you can't learn the technical details effectively if you're not actually writing. This isn't a chicken and egg thing. The writing must be happening before you can properly appreciate the technicalities. Quote:
I'd also add that the risk of getting feedback from fellow writers is that they are fellow writers. We want to tell the story as we see it, it's what we do, and it can sometimes be difficult constrain our feedback to the story the other person is actually telling. |
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#36 |
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
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gmw:
I would agree, absolutely, that the writer's first job is, after all, to WRITE, and I would further agree that they can't get better at it if they don't do it. This is, basically, the point I was trying to make earlier--there's a difference between being a writer and being a published author. One is doing one thing; the other another. That's all. Hitch |
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#37 | |
cacoethes scribendi
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We tend to look at the plethora of "published" work and become appalled at how such drivel made it to "publication" (the quotes have a reason that I hope will become clear, please don't think I'm waving my fingers in air and being overly emphatic ![]() There is the thing that has always been with us, that most books look like drivel to someone, no matter how well written, edited and presented. Let's ignore that one. There was a time when sharing a story you'd written meant printing (and before that typing or writing) it out and handing it around friends and family. That doesn't happen anymore. You might think people would just email one another, but lots of people have trouble with email attachments: "I can't open it, I don't have the right version of Word", or "I can't load it on my Kindle" ... or whatever. It's now sometimes easier to "publish" your work, just to be able to share it with a few friends - and perhaps the vain wish/thought that some strangers might find it and like it too. And that's why I put quotes around "publish". I don't know this for a fact, but I suspect that Amazon and Smashwords are sometimes being used as just another social network site, a way that people share their work with their friends. So sometimes they are not trying to publish as such, they are just sharing. And as Clay Shirky said in his book Here Comes Everybody, (paraphrasing here, but it's close enough) "they aren't talking to you." Of course there are those overly confident ones that Dr Drib spoke of, that think the masterpiece they just finished writing out last night is ready for the big time, but it's now so easy to use these publishing sites that I suspect my interpretation may have some merit (and at least paints a kinder picture of what we see appearing). I have no idea how this all pans out statistically. |
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#38 |
eBook Enthusiast
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It really, REALLY bugs me that so many people are apparently ignorant of elementary grammar, such as knowing the difference between "its" and "it's". I was taught this in school when I was about 6 years old; why don't people know this simple rule any longer?
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#39 | |
The Dank Side of the Moon
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#40 | |
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
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