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Want to be a writer? Just do it

Playwright Diane Samuels reveals the secrets of finding success as an author

February 25, 2010 14:06
260212 Writer

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

3 min read

"How do you become a writer?" I am often asked by people who feel they have a book, play, collection of poetry in them, but have no idea how to get it out. Accompanying this question is often an underlying feeling of being overwhelmed by the enormity of the task, of having to prove that they can deliver the goods. Comparisons with successful published works crowd the mind and dwarf the would-be writer into utter insignificance.

Author and poet Miriam Halahmi, who will be running a workshop on writing fiction from memoirs at this year's Jewish Book Week, is no stranger to the challenge.

"In order to progress along the marathon of writing a novel, the end of which may be months or even years away, with no sure promise of reward, the writer has to be able to sit alone and motivate herself to write and write and write… to maintain their pace and their word count, alone, hour after hour, after week, after month, after year. It is little wonder that so many fall by the wayside?"

There are many courses, workshops and groups to which writers take their work in development with the determined aim of getting published. They are often taught the tools and methods: how to build character, structure, narrative, how to edit, re-write, begin, end, pitch, sell and get the work out there. All this is very helpful, certainly worth learning, but it crucially needs to be accompanied by some kind of writing practice too."