I RESOLVE TO . . .
Resolutions
for Writers
by
Rhonda Browning White
Turn the calendar page. Better
still, break out an entirely new calendar. We have more than a new month ahead;
we have a whole new year in front of us! Blank squares waiting to be filled with
important appointments, blank lines waiting to be filled with significant
words. The year 2014 presents a fresh start—a chance for growth and
improvement—for every writer, so let’s resolve to do something vital and
vivacious with each new day that’s given to us. What good is a New Year without
a few resolutions, anyway? Print out this list, and make it yours.
·
. . . Write
five days a week. If you’re one of those writers who lives by the mantra, Write every day, then goody for you! I
live in the real world, however, where writing is a job—my career—and like any
job, I do it five days a week, reserving the other two for my family and
myself. Besides, life gets in the way, and it’s unrealistic to think we can (or
would even want to) write every single day. We set ourselves up for failure when
we insist we must write 365 days a year. Don’t fail. Allow yourself a couple of
days off, but write the other five.
·
. . . Write
100 words a day (five days a week). Anyone—anyone!—can do this. You pound
out several hundred words a day on Facebook, a thousand or more via email and a dozen at a time on Twitter. One hundred words a day is nothing. Nothing! A few of
my friends and I started this 100-words-a-day challenge, and we hold each other
to it. We report in daily, sometimes admitting defeat (kid is sick, car broke
down, computer on the fritz), but more often gloating that we wrote 200 words—or
2,500 words. You’ll find that, more often than not, 100 words leads to 500
words, and soon you’ve written multiple pages. Even on the busiest days, you’ve
accomplished something toward your
goal, even if it’s only 100 words.
·
. . . Read,
read, read! You can’t be a great writer unless you’re an avid reader. Read the
genre in which you want to write. If you write romance, read the latest romance
novels on The New York Times bestseller
list. Be sure to read the masters. If high school was the last time you read
Hemingway, Hawthorne or Flannery O’Connor, you’ve done yourself a great
disservice as a writer. Works by these canonical writers are still around for a
reason. Figure out what that reason is, and apply those lessons to your own
work.
·
. . . Study
the craft of writing. Resolve to read six books on the craft of writing
this year. That’s only one book every other month. Easy-peasy! Some of my
favorites include The Lie that Tells a Truth by John Dufresne, Reading Like a Writer by Francine Prose, and Making Shapely Fiction by Jerome Stern. Especially good for beginning writers is Sandy
Tritt’s Tips and Techniques Workbook (available for automatic download online HERE), which
includes fill-in-the-blank worksheets and direct examples to help improve your
writing. Take a writing course at
your local college this year, or attend a writers conference that offers
courses in writing craft.
·
. . . Type
“The End.” Have a file full of half-finished short stories? Seven different
novel beginnings? Three memoirs that total less than a hundred pages each? Stop
procrastinating, and finish something! This is where the 100-words-a-day
challenge can help you reach the end of your first draft. Butt in chair,
fingers on keyboard. Write!
·
. . . Have
my work professionally edited. What’s the difference between a
traditionally published author and an unpublished writer? Many times, an editor.
What do author-editors have in common? We have our work professionally edited.
Yes, editors hire editors. It’s true that we can’t see our own mistakes in our
writing, so it’s important to have trained
eyes look over our final drafts. Professional editors will do more than
find typos and grammar mistakes; they’ll point out that your character has green
eyes in chapter one and blue eyes in chapter twenty. They’ll remind you that
you left a loose sub-plot thread dangling back in chapter eleven, and explain
where the middle sags. They’ll show you where you forgot to include internal
conflict in a scene full of external conflict. In other words, they’ll help you
make your writing much better.
·
. . . Network
with other writers. Join a writers group in your area. Don’t have one?
Start one. Your local library is a good place to begin, or post a bulletin on
Meetups.com. Attend a writers conference where you can meet writers at your
same skill level, as well as network with professionals in the field from whom
you can learn. And by all means, support other writers. Write a positive review
on Amazon.com or Goodreads.com of any novels or books you’ve loved, especially
if those books are written by new or up-and-coming authors. One day, you’ll
want someone to return the favor and write a review of your latest novel.
·
. . . Submit.
Writing a novel and having it professionally edited will do you no good at
all if you allow it to molder on your laptop. Whip out a polished query letter
(which, of course, you’ve revised, edited and proofed), and send that
manuscript out the door. Realize up front that you’ll receive rejections, and
know that you may have to send out a few hundred queries to land an agent or
publisher. Still, you must submit your work in order to have it traditionally
published, so you may as well get started this
year.
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