Make Your Writing Quirks Work for You

 

Anne Rice
“I’ve been told all my life that I was not a writer! I just marvel at it.”

Best-selling writer Anne Rice was the featured interviewee in the Nov/Dec ’13 edition of Writer’s Digest. It was so refreshing to hear Anne stress that there are no rules in writing. In fact, she’s been frequently told that she isn’t a “real writer”:

I was discouraged very early in my college years by people who told me I wasn’t a real writer because I didn’t write every day. Things like that should not be said. And anybody who says anything like that, you have to ignore them. You know, there are no rules.

And I love how she openly shares her struggles with certain parts of the writing process:

The biggest problem for me . . . is getting into the story. I can see the whole thing. The whole shape, all the characters, what they’re doing, and I can’t seem to find a way to break in. And I rewrite the opening pages over and over and over again. It’s like OCD—it’s like hand-washing. And finally I get so frustrated that I go and pick up something like The Godfather by Mario Puzo, which is great storytelling, but just any way he wants to do it. I mean, he may introduce Luca Brasi here, and never get to physically describing him until 50 pages later, to never get to telling who he really is until 100 pages after that. And that clears up my OCD. OK, just plunge—just start. Just go.

(She also added that it isn’t until she’s two or three hundred pages into a manuscript when she finally knows she’s not going to quit!)

I especially like Anne’s parting thoughts at the end of the interview:

Protect your voice and your vision . . . Do what gets you to write, and not what blocks you. And no matter where you are in your career, whether you’re published, unpublished, or just starting out, walk through the world as a writer. That’s who you are, and that’s what you want to be, and don’t take any guff off anybody.

4 thoughts on “Make Your Writing Quirks Work for You

  1. Great reminder. Sometimes, the “good girl” in me can’t help but want to “get it right” – whatever that means. Authentic trumps meeting any kind of standard or following of the rules every time.

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    1. I’m not sure, Daniel. I’ve never read her books and, honestly, I don’t think I ever would because I don’t gravitate to her genres. I did like the advice she gave, though, and it’s nice to know there’s a published author out there that has some of the same writing quirks as me. Thanks for checking out my blog and I hope to hear from you again soon!

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