I’ve spent a lovely three days hob-nobbing with other authors and attending writing panels. Here are some gems from the classes.
- The day I stop learning about my characters is the day I become bored with them — Margaret Coel
- Good beginnings and endings are like good art: I know it when I see it, but it’s awfully hard to define — Jamie McGrath Morris
- One of the biggest dialogue mistakes I see is when all the characters sound alike — Craig Johnson
- Write the kind of novel that, once the reader picks it up, he cannot bear to put it down; not the kind of novel that, once he puts it down, he cannot bear to pick it back up — Margaret Coel
- Before you even sit down to write, know — in this order — what the ending is, and what the beginning will be — Kirk Ellis
- Writing is not a profession, but a vocation. Think bigger than just a contract, a published book. Ask yourself ‘Is this worth one to three years of my life?’ before you begin that novel — David Morrell
- Try this: gather a stack of award-winning novels and read the ending first. Then, read the book to see how the author gets from Point A to Point Z. Do that 500 times. Can you imagine how much you’ll learn about the art of plotting? — Steve Havill
- Here’s a big secret: have someone read your dialogue back to you — Craig Johnson
- ‘Let me tell you a story’ is a very powerful lure — Jamie McGrath Morris
- It’s never as good as it could be. And ‘spoiler alert:’ it’s never going to be — Kirk Ellis
- Become a student of human nature — Craig Johnson
What is the best advice you’ve ever heard from another writer?