I picked up this book and started reading it because I was desperate.
I needed to increase my writing output at work, but I felt desperately stuck on the same problem I'd struggled with since high school: I just couldn't write fast.
The older I got, the more my skill as a writer improved — but the more I agonized over every word. I became less and less satisfied with my writing, and even the act of writing fiction became increasingly less enjoyable.
After reading How to Write Fast, I have hope again. I've already applied some of the principles in the book to my content writing, and while I'm still not a speed demon, I'm a lot faster than I used to be. Fast enough to get a satisfactory review and a kudos on my writing productivity improvement at work.
Sean stresses the fact that writers who improve using the methods in this book really have themselves to thank for it because reading the book won't make you faster. Apply what's in it will.
But I'd like to thank Sean, Neeve, and everyone else at Sterling & Stone anyway.
This book is both incredibly accessible (it's beautifully down to earth and devoid of fluff) and contains pretty much everything a struggling writer needs to not only write faster, but to break through blocks and learn to enjoy writing again.
And while the advice is insanely good, I think what made this book truly helpful is that it didn't overwhelm me with a thousand-and-one tips for writing faster. It gave me the core advice, the stuff I really, really needed to know. It's designed to be truly actionable.
I'm now using the nifty 60-Second-Summary of the book's key points to give writing and finishing my first novel another shot. We'll see how it goes.