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116 pages, Kindle Edition
First published February 9, 2014
And for heaven’s sake, be extra, extra careful when you listen to any writer who is not a long distance down the publishing road ahead of you. (Kindle Locations 94-95).
This business is fluid and crazy most of the time, and the need for security screams out in most of us. So in the early years we writers search for “rules” to follow, shortcuts that will cut down the time involved, secret handshakes that will get us through doors. It is only after a lot of time that professional writers come to realize that the only rules are the ones we put on ourselves. In my early years I was no different.
Writers are people who sit alone in a room and make stuff up. The problem we have is that when we get insecure without rules, we make stuff up as well. (Kindle Locations 158-163)
I am the world’s worst typist. I use four fingers, up from two, and if I can manage 250 words in fifteen minutes I’m pretty happy. I tend to average around 750-1,000 words per hour of work. Then I take a break. I am not a “fast” typist, but I am considered a “fast” writer because I spend more time writing than the myth allows. (Kindle Locations 367-369).
You go to a hotel and meet a total stranger. They agree to take months of your work and sell it, then you trust this total stranger after they have sold your work with getting you all the money from your work and all the paperwork for that money. You don’t know the person. And only in publishing do otherwise sane and smart business people think this sort of thing makes sense. (Kindle Locations 797-800).
Writing careers can NOT be killed unless the writer stops writing. But the belief that a career can be killed by a mistake is often terminal for a writer. (Kindle Locations 1866-1867)