Advice to a New Writer by Allison Symes

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Picture this. You meet a new writer who likes your work (wonderful), has bought your book (even better), and they’re after writing advice from you (flattered to be asked). What do you say? My thoughts are:-

Be well stocked up on tea, coffee, or other non-alcoholic beverages. Writing is hard work (and alcohol doesn’t aid concentration). You need something to keep you going. Biscuits may prove to be your Slimming World consultant’s friend! Having to get up every so often means you get screen breaks! It’s an ill wind and all that. Do keep hydrated. Dehydration does nothing for creativity. 

Despite writing to screen, it pays to have pen and paper handy. I often have ideas for stories while working on blogs. I jot these down and examine them later. Sometimes they’re excellent and I use them. Sometimes they’re not as good as I thought and I discard them. There seems to be an unwritten law stating the busier you are with something, inspiration will strike you on something else! Best to just work with this.

Accept your printer will run out of paper or toner during a print run. Take comfort knowing this happens to everyone. Your printer is not out to get you - honest.

Staring into space is an occupational hazard for writers. We know we are working out ideas. Others around us will see us as staring into space meaning we are clearly doing nothing and can be interrupted. This is where you discover whether you need to develop the virtue of patience or not. (Am working on it before you ask).  

Deadlines come along faster than you think.

You will spot typos and/or grammatical errors just before you’re due to send something out. This is why I bring any deadline forward to a date of my choosing so I can sort these out and submit my pieces in good time. Take that, Murphy’s Law for Writers!

You need an editor. We all do.

Join a professional body such as the Society of Authors and/or the Alliance of Independent Authors. You need to know where to go for advice. Every industry has its sharks, including publishing. See the subscriptions as an investment in your writing. 

Meet writers. You’ll make friends. You’ll share tips. It is fun. We spend time at our desks alone so getting together, in person and/or online, is a magnificent morale boost. We all need that too.

Read. Read contemporary, classic, books, short stories and flash fiction (no prizes for guessing why I put that in), read magazines. Inspiration comes from things we read so you want a decent “pool” for your imagination to fish in. 

What you then do with those ideas is what we will want to discover. You will bring your own take to a topic. All of the love stories have not been written, just to name one example. What about the ones you are yet to write?

Any thoughts on what you would share with a new writer?

Comments

  1. Excellent advice to a new writer and to us all the 'oldies' at it! Thanks and blessings.

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  2. Some great tips. I would add: keep going! Ignore the people who tell you how often and/or how much you 'should' be writing everyday and fin what works for you. Having a specific place and time to write has helped me, but others can work more randomly. Tea is always good!

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  3. Thanks, Jenny. I'm with you for the tea too!

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  4. All brilliant and wise advice. I can certainly confirm that your printer will inexplicably go offline and run out of ink and toner just as you have decided that you absolutely must print your completed ms because you do not trust technology, even though you have that ms saved digitally in 3 separate places and have just sent it to your publisher.

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    1. Thanks, Sheila. There is no such thing as too many back ups! I still edit my smaller pieces on paper and just know the toner will run out when I'm ready to run out a batch to go through!

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  5. I would say 'Always have something in the pipeline. Rejection stings less if you have one or two other things out on submission or other projects on the go.'

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  6. Try not to take criticism too personally. Someone said that in every critical comment, there is usually a pearl of truth. Hunt for the pearl ; forget the rest. It might have been Dawson Trotman (founder of The Navigators)
    Great post, Allyson 🙂

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  7. Some great advice here and I relate to so much of what you say. My advice to any Christian writer is pray and listen.

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  8. Great advice! I'd say don't compare yourself to others - very hard advice to take but it is pointless and only leads to sadness and envy. Totally agree about the toner! My printer loves to go offline for no particular reason just as I really need it to be on side

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