Roy Eugene Singleton Jr.
asked
David Wong:
Hey, David, I noticed anytime you're asked about your work or social life, you describe how busy you are and how often you're working on this that and the other. I was wondering, you describe it as if its terribly exhausting, but is the reward greater than the effort you put in?
David Wong
I'm writing this at 2:20 AM. I'm wrapping up a work day that started at 8:30 AM. In six hours I'll start again.
As for your question, is it worth it? I can't tell. I just know that I have a really narrow window of opportunity to create things while people are still willing to pay for them. I feel like I have a responsibility to create while I'm capable and while people are listening. Audiences don't hang around forever, eventually they'll find something they like better and I'll get too old or my ideas too repetitive. We mock pop stars and pro athletes who go bankrupt two years after the fame ends for not saving money, for not realizing that what they had was temporary. Well I do realize it.
I've been on the other side, I've talked to other writers who never made it, I know how fragile this all is. So yes, I'm going to rewrite every sentence five times. I'm going to work 90 hour weeks. I'm going to get everything I want to say down in writing, in the best possible way I know to say it, knowing that once it's done it's done. When I'm old and gray and my writing sounds like Larry King's Twitter ("I don't know about you, but I prefer my salmon cold!") I'll know that the old stuff is there, forever. E-books never go out of print. And I want to live those years knowing that everything I wrote was good, or as good as I could make it.
I have plenty of critics, but the one criticism that will never stick is any claim that I'm lazy, or that I dashed off work to cash in, or meet a deadline. Whatever they may say about me, they'll never say I didn't put the effort in.
As for your question, is it worth it? I can't tell. I just know that I have a really narrow window of opportunity to create things while people are still willing to pay for them. I feel like I have a responsibility to create while I'm capable and while people are listening. Audiences don't hang around forever, eventually they'll find something they like better and I'll get too old or my ideas too repetitive. We mock pop stars and pro athletes who go bankrupt two years after the fame ends for not saving money, for not realizing that what they had was temporary. Well I do realize it.
I've been on the other side, I've talked to other writers who never made it, I know how fragile this all is. So yes, I'm going to rewrite every sentence five times. I'm going to work 90 hour weeks. I'm going to get everything I want to say down in writing, in the best possible way I know to say it, knowing that once it's done it's done. When I'm old and gray and my writing sounds like Larry King's Twitter ("I don't know about you, but I prefer my salmon cold!") I'll know that the old stuff is there, forever. E-books never go out of print. And I want to live those years knowing that everything I wrote was good, or as good as I could make it.
I have plenty of critics, but the one criticism that will never stick is any claim that I'm lazy, or that I dashed off work to cash in, or meet a deadline. Whatever they may say about me, they'll never say I didn't put the effort in.
More Answered Questions
Charles
asked
David Wong:
Hey Jason, I finished WtHDIJR (what a mouthfull of an acronym) in a single sitting the day it came out. It was really good, keep the novels coming. I know the DVD for JDatE has been out awhile but have you ever considered doing an unofficial commentary track for the movie (e.g. Darren Aronofsky put one online for his movie The Fountain)? It would be neat to get a first-hand author's perspective scene-by-scene.
Kris
asked
David Wong:
This isn't a question but I died and was revived in 2011 and spent a week in a coma afterwards. Upon reawakening a friend gave me John Dies At The End. I read it while recovering in the hospital, pondering what everything meant. That book really helped me get through a really weird, dark, confusing time in my life. It was as trippy as I wanted and and funny as I needed. I just wanted to say thanks for that book?
David Wong
5,748 followers
About Goodreads Q&A
Ask and answer questions about books!
You can pose questions to the Goodreads community with Reader Q&A, or ask your favorite author a question with Ask the Author.
See Featured Authors Answering Questions
Learn more




