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Oliver Harris
"A successful first chapter can be fast, slow, thoughtful, dramatic, but it will ..." More

Rose Tremain's Writing Tips

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Thursday April 14, 2011 at 7:58pm

1. Forget the boring old dictum "write about what you know". Instead, seek out an unknown yet knowable area of experience that's going to enhance your understanding of the world and write about that.

2. Nevertheless, remember that in the particularity of your own life lies the seedcorn that will feed your imaginative work. So don't throw it all away on autobiography. (There are quite enough writers' memoirs out there already.)

3. Never be satisfied with a first draft. In fact, never be satisfied with your own stuff at all, until you're certain it's as good as your finite powers can ­enable it to be.

4. Listen to the criticisms and preferences of your trusted "first readers".

5. When an idea comes, spend silent time with it. Remember Keats's idea of Negative Capability and Kipling's advice to "drift, wait and obey". Along with your gathering of hard data, allow yourself also to dream your idea into being.

6. In the planning stage of a book, don't plan the ending. It has to be earned by all that will go before it.

7. Respect the way characters may change once they've got 50 pages of life in them. Revisit your plan at this stage and see whether certain things have to be altered to take account of these changes.

8. If you're writing historical fiction, don't have well-known real characters as your main protagonists. This will only create biographical unease in the readers and send them back to the history books. If you must write about real people, then do something post-modern and playful with them.

9. Learn from cinema. Be economic with descriptions. Sort out the telling detail from the lifeless one. Write dialogue that people would actually speak.

10. Never begin the book when you feel you want to begin it, but hold off a while longer.

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4 Comments

Jess Grocock | Tuesday May 3, 2011 at 8:53pm
Haha I read Rule 6 and thought 'oops'! I did all the other rules so I'm feeling a lot better than when I read Elmore Leonard's 10 writing tips.....
Asit Saha | Tuesday May 24, 2011 at 10:53am
Very much delighted to have your suggested rules for writing a good fiction or romance because the will help me to see the right path to reach the destination, as I dream of. Thanks a lot....
Julie Noble | Tuesday May 24, 2011 at 1:25pm
They are all really good, useful and interesting except for number 3. If I wait until I am really really satisfied I will never send anything out - or I will be like Proust on his death-bed. I don't think as a writer I can ever attain perfection, and I always notice things later that I might have changed.... Thanks for 10. With five kids that's often a necessity - now I can view delay as a positive not a negative!...
Joy Bhattacherjee | Wednesday May 25, 2011 at 8:16pm
Just finished my first draft, already feeling a bit over the top. Must control myself though. Desperately in need of a non-commercial frind-editor who will see the manuscript....

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