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"A story gets better every time you rewrite it, the same way a painter layers paint on a canvas."
This has to be the most unusual method for writing fast I've encountered so far. Write your novel in 6 weeks, then make a detailed plan about what to change (10-20 pages), then rewrite the whole book in 12 weeks and only copy the sentences or sections in a new document that work, then repeat the process until you are satisfied with the book (although more editing and less rewriting from draft 3 on). If it works for you, great! It might be because I paint with watercolors and don't add 20 layers of oil paint, but I prefer to write a solid, complete, tight first draft, even if it takes more time, and be done with one thorough editing pass, but everyone is different. As the author repeatedly and rightly states, do what's best for you and your process.
Apart from that the usual tips about time management, setting goals, developing a routine and sticking to it plus a big chunk about structure and outlining (even for pantsers). Nothing groundbreakingly new, but solid information.
P.S. In my mind a misunderstanding is not "a useful literary device", it's a lazy way to generate conflict.
Excellent read, was done to the point and very well justified. Built very well, though a more detailed table of contents would be nice. Well inspired from James Scott Bell. Excellent !