Joyce Carol Oates is an acclaimed author of more than forty novels and countless short stories. She won the National Book Award for her novel, them and has been thrice-nominated for the Pulitzer Prize. Oates is known for tackling hard subjects, such as poverty, violence, and racial tensions.
She offers these earnest, yet entertaining tips:
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Write your heart out.
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The first sentence can be written only after the last sentence has been written. FIRST DRAFTS ARE HELL. FINAL DRAFTS, PARADISE.
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You are writing for your contemporaries not for Posterity. If you are lucky, your contemporaries will become Posterity.
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Keep in mind Oscar Wilde: A little sincerity is a dangerous thing, and a great deal of it is absolutely fatal.
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When in doubt how to end a chapter, bring in a man with a gun. (This is Raymond Chandler's advice, not mine. I would not try this.)
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Unless you are experimenting with form gnarled, snarled, & obscure be alert for possibilities of paragraphing.
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Be your own editor/critic. Sympathetic but merciless!
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Don't try to anticipate an ideal reader or any reader. He/she might exist but is reading someone else.
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Read, observe, listen intensely! as if your life depended upon it.
- Write your heart out.
Originally tweeted by Joyce Carol Oates and compiled by Brain Pickings.