Top Writing Quotes Collection - Page 102

Discover a curated collection of Writing quotes. Find inspiration, motivation, and wisdom from the best quotes in this category. Page 102 provides more Writing quotes.

Image of Jess Row
I never really had novel-writing instruction like people do in MFA programs.
- Jess Row
Collection: Writing
Image of Mandy Stadtmiller
I prefer to not be feeling like I'm having to be fake about things that are the most dear to me in terms of writing, which is something related to my own, personal writing. I mean, I've done tons and tons of fake writing.
- Mandy Stadtmiller
Collection: Writing
Image of Mandy Stadtmiller
People don't actually, a lot of times, know the game behind the game. If people think that they do, it's a little bit of a naïve assessment of how the [writing] industry works.
- Mandy Stadtmiller
Collection: Writing
Image of Takudzwa Victoria Rosa Maidza
I write from my point of view.
- Takudzwa Victoria Rosa Maidza
Collection: Writing
Image of Takudzwa Victoria Rosa Maidza
I like to write music that I feel like I would listen to. It's like my interpretation of what I want to hear.
- Takudzwa Victoria Rosa Maidza
Collection: Writing
Image of Francois Mauriac
I write whenever it suits me. During a creative period I write every day; a novel should not be interrupted. When I cease to be carried along, when I no longer feel as though I were taking down dictation, I stop.
- Francois Mauriac
Collection: Writing
Image of Annia Ciezadlo
There hasn't been a lot written about it in the Western media. But in the Arab world, and Western Asia as a whole, Baghdad was always known as a famously bookish, intellectual city. There's an old saying that Cairo writes, Beirut publishes, and Baghdad reads.
- Annia Ciezadlo
Collection: Writing
Image of Travis Morrison
I'm a total ho for any writing workshop, any technique from anyone.
- Travis Morrison
Collection: Writing
Image of Travis Morrison
I sometimes try a variance of the drawer trick - [I write it] and then come back to it and see if it blows.
- Travis Morrison
Collection: Writing
Image of Travis Morrison
I saw an interview with Jay-Z where he said he didn't write down any of his lyrics, so I tried that.
- Travis Morrison
Collection: Writing
Image of Katie Kitamura
It's a hard thing to examine and difficult to speak for other writers, but when I look at my own writing there is often too much reticence. And that's a flaw I have as a person as well. I'm too reticent. I'm non-confrontational to a fault. And I'm risk-averse, which probably shows in my sentences. The aversion to long lines, the tendency to strip things back and be spare. My writing is an act of erasure that's tied up with my personality. I can easily produce a ninety thousand word chunk of writing and then cut back and back until I've only got ten thousand words. Or nothing.
- Katie Kitamura
Collection: Writing
Image of Katie Kitamura
Fiction always reveals a lot about the person who is writing it. That's the scary thing. Not in a straightforward autobiographical sense. But the flaws in a piece of fiction are, unhappily, so often also the flaws of the writer.
- Katie Kitamura
Collection: Writing
Image of Katie Kitamura
I'm interested in dismantling the distinction between masculine and feminine writing both because I think it's a false distinction and, I think, ultimately an insulting one. It's as insulting to men as it is to women. I'm not sure what masculine writing would look like - I assume some combination of Ernest Hemingway and Raymond Carver. Writing can't be gendered in that way.
- Katie Kitamura
Collection: Writing
Image of Katie Kitamura
I can't define myself as a political writer - I don't think I've earned it, and I don't function as a political writer in the way that many of the writers I admire do. It's not simply a question of context, of where I'm writing from - there is much in American society that urgently needs to be written about. I think your work is always engaged with politics in the looser sense of the word - and that looseness is itself a kind of privilege - because politics and culture are evidently intertwined.
- Katie Kitamura
Collection: Writing
Image of Katie Kitamura
I don't speak any languages well enough to make an expert assessment on writing in translation, but since I'm interested in awkwardness in prose, I find I like the way translated texts can sometimes acquire awkwardness in the process of translation. There's a discordance translation can create which I think is sometimes seen as a weakness but which I think can be a really interesting aspect of the text.
- Katie Kitamura
Collection: Writing
Image of Volker Bertelmann
I get a lot of emails where people are writing me their experiences, how they discovered my music, what they feel... they motivate me to carry on with what I am doing.
- Volker Bertelmann
Collection: Writing
Image of Adam Braver
If one is writing in a way that is questioning, or even raising questions about how we are supposed to negotiate the world - even if it is about the self, or love, or how human beings relate - I do think that has a certain subversiveness to it. Even if it's not on a geopolitical level.
- Adam Braver
Collection: Writing
Image of Tony Bellew
I'm the little fat cruiser weight, write me off at your peril.
- Tony Bellew
Collection: Writing
Image of TyDi
I first started writing music when I was 15 and at 16, I was playing in different cities in Australia. When I was 18, I was voted number one DJ in Australia.
- TyDi
Collection: Writing
Image of David E. Cooper
Like Nietzsche's own writings on education, most of mine were relatively youthful ones. Both were inspired by a critical animus against prevailing trends in education: in Nietzsche's case, the production either of 'useless', dry-as-dust scholars or people 'useful' for the needs of an expanding industrial economy; in my case, a similar subjection of education to economic imperatives, but also to ideological obsessions, notably with promoting 'equality'.
- David E. Cooper
Collection: Writing
Image of David E. Cooper
The writing I have in mind and sometimes indulge in myself is concerned, not with plants, mountains or birds as items of scientific description, but with experiences of nature that impinge upon our moods and emotions, enrich our imagination and reveries, and shape our sense of how we stand in relation to the environing world. In a broad sense of the term, this kind of writing is an exercise in phenomenology, an attempt to render the significance that birds, plants or whatever have for us.
- David E. Cooper
Collection: Writing
Image of Armistead Maupin
I think many writers write because it's a convenient way to explain themselves to themselves. We take the chaos and the turmoil and the bullshit of our lives, and we make it into something that has a harmonious shape and sound.
- Armistead Maupin
Collection: Writing
Image of Armistead Maupin
When I started writing Tales of the City I was one year away from being a mental illness. It wasn't until 1975 that the American Psychiatric Association took homosexuality off the list of mental illnesses - and in many states, including the state of North Carolina where I grew up, homosexuality was a crime. An arrestable crime. It still is, in many parts of the world.
- Armistead Maupin
Collection: Writing
Image of Chuck Wendig
You've got all these characters and yet, you're hovering over one character like a fly over a stinky diaper. Realize that you've got a kickass superpower: you can possess and take-over anybody inside the story. With the power of Point-of-View, you can drag us along for the ride. You can shove us into their eyes, their minds, you can force us to piggyback on their experiences past and present. Sometimes untangling a knotted-up tale means looking at it from different eyes: what better eyes than those of the other characters inside the story?
- Chuck Wendig
Collection: Writing
Image of Chuck Wendig
Story matters. Writing is important. Stories make the world go around. Many things begin as words on a page. It matters to the world. And it matters to you. Don't let anyone rob you of that. Don't rob yourself of it, either. Don't diminish. Don't dismiss. Embrace. Create. Accelerate.
- Chuck Wendig
Collection: Writing
Image of Chuck Wendig
Write like you write, like you can't help but write, and your voice will become yours and yours alone. It'll take time but it'll happen as long as you let it. Own your voice, for your voice is your own. Once you know where your voice lives, you no longer have to worry so much about being derivative.
- Chuck Wendig
Collection: Writing
Image of Chuck Wendig
In my mind, only one inviolable precept exists in terms of being a successful writer: you have to write. The unspoken sub-laws of that one precept are: to write, you must start writing and then finish writing. And then, most likely, start writing all over again because this writing "thing" is one long and endless ride on a really weird (but pretty awesome) carousel. Cue the calliope music.
- Chuck Wendig
Collection: Writing
Image of Chuck Wendig
Enter the story as late as you can.
- Chuck Wendig
Collection: Writing
Image of Chuck Wendig
Remember: a story is not a vignette. It has a beginning, middle and an end. It is not merely a snapshot in time.
- Chuck Wendig
Collection: Writing
Image of Chuck Wendig
The easiest way to separate yourself from the unformed blobby mass of "aspiring" writers is to a) actually write and b) actually finish. That's how easy it is to clamber up the ladder to the second echelon. Write. And finish what you write. That's how you break away from the pack and leave the rest of the sickly herd for the hungry wolves of shame and self-doubt. And for all I know, actual wolves.
- Chuck Wendig
Collection: Writing
Image of Chuck Wendig
Writing relies on very few things, my friend. All you need to write is your brain, a way to convey the story into existence (pen, computer, whatever), and a place in which to do it (office, kitchen table, lunar brothel).
- Chuck Wendig
Collection: Writing
Image of Chuck Wendig
When in doubt, the rule of threes is a rule that plays well with all of storytelling. When describing a thing? No more than three details. A character's arc? Three beats. A story? Three acts. An act? Three sequences. A plot point culminating in a mystery of a twist? At least three mentions throughout the tale. This is an old rule, and a good one. It's not universal - but it's a good place to start.
- Chuck Wendig
Collection: Writing
Image of Chuck Wendig
Nobody becomes a writer overnight. Well, I'm sure somebody did, but that person's head probably went all asplodey from paroxysms of joy, fear, paranoia, guilt and uncertainty. Celebrities can be born overnight. Writer's can't. Writers are made - forged, really, in a kiln of their own madness and insecurities - over the course of many, many moons. The writer you are when you begin is not the same writer you become.
- Chuck Wendig
Collection: Writing
Image of Chuck Wendig
Let someone else take a crack at [your story]. Sometimes, even after time has passed, we're just too close to the thing. You don't want to kill your darlings or, maybe it's the opposite: you just want to kill all of it with cleansing fire. Let someone else confirm or veto your feelings. They'll also bring new questions and complexities to the table, too.
- Chuck Wendig
Collection: Writing
Image of Chuck Wendig
Write til your fingers bleed.
- Chuck Wendig
Collection: Writing
Image of Fred D'Aguiar
Because I write intuitively and image-by-image and moment-by-moment, my writing has to be powered by feelings and emotions.
- Fred D'Aguiar
Collection: Writing
Image of Allison Silverman
Writing is just my first love. And I still have some issues with telling people what to do.
- Allison Silverman
Collection: Writing
Image of Allison Silverman
Women are often pushed into the idea that they write softer, more character-driven jokes.
- Allison Silverman
Collection: Writing
Image of Allison Silverman
I actually write some pretty tough jokes. I don't want to push the "soft" angle too much.
- Allison Silverman
Collection: Writing
Image of Larry McMurtry
Writing is a form of herding. I herd words into little paragraph-like clusters.
- Larry McMurtry
Collection: Writing
Image of Haroon Moghul
There are times when I think being bipolar gives me the ability to see and want and write things that other people cannot and do not. One of those is writing. Creativity is something that co-presents with bipolarity. There are other times when being bipolar legitimately sucks and leads you to a point where you want to kill yourself. Very odd thing when your brain which, evolutionarily speaking, should want you to survive is telling you to die.
- Haroon Moghul
Collection: Writing
Image of Haroon Moghul
Writing something down and processing it, sitting with a text and a story, editing and rewriting new drafts - that entire process helps clarify something for myself. Depending on the person, the act of trying to tell your story helps you understand yourself better, helps you come to terms with something that happened.
- Haroon Moghul
Collection: Writing
Image of Jay L. Garfield
We take Aristotle seriously not when we write about his ideas, but when we take his ideas as part of our discussions.
- Jay L. Garfield
Collection: Writing
Image of Arthur Bradford
I've always liked the classic "young adult" writers like Mark Twain, Jack London, Roald Dahl, Charles Dickens. They write so clearly, and they know how to entertain.
- Arthur Bradford
Collection: Writing
Image of Arthur Bradford
I'm not very disciplined. I tend to write late at night because I get distracted during the day.
- Arthur Bradford
Collection: Writing
Image of Arthur Bradford
I write most of my first drafts on an old manual typewriter, a really old one. It's a big black metal "Woodstock" from about 1920. I try to write everything down at once, in one sitting. The longer stories in this collection are divided up into sections. Each section represents a different sitting, a different idea for the same story.
- Arthur Bradford
Collection: Writing
Image of Arthur Bradford
I'm trying to write stories that are interesting and enjoyable.
- Arthur Bradford
Collection: Writing
Image of David McCullough
You can't learn to play the piano without playing the piano, you can't learn to write without writing, and, in many ways, you can't learn to think without thinking. Writing is thinking. To write well is to think clearly. That's why it's so hard.
- David McCullough
Collection: Writing
Image of Robert Paul Weston
Since I tend to write chronologically, the middle is always the place where the process is most taxing.
- Robert Paul Weston
Collection: Writing