Meg Rosoff is a wonderful writer. When I first read How I Live Now, I was utterly captivated by the voice of 15 year-old Daisy, and her story about surviving war; finding family; leaving home only to discover what home really is; falling madly in love and ultimately, figuring out what she truly valued. It was hilarious, heartbreaking, magical and oddly hopeful. I've read everything she's written since.
I've also been an avid reader of what she has to say about writing. Here's a list from her blog post (check out the full post here), where she equates learning to write to being a medieval apprentice shoemaker—it's incisive, funny and great advice.
How to Write
by Meg Rosoff
[...] And so here are a few things I learned in my apprenticeship.
READ. Bestsellers and obscure new writers, 18th, 19th and 20thcentury writers as well. Shakespeare. History and fiction, memoir and picture books, everything that’s really good and occasionally some stuff that’s really bad. Ideas come from everywhere, and besides, if you’re not interested in books you shouldn’t be writing them.
Marketing is important. If there’s no market, there’s no money (and writing is, after all, a job – a better than average job, but a job nonetheless).
But….ignore the market when you work. People writing solely to make money can always be picked out of a criminal line-up. They look cheap, sweaty and desperate. The rest of us just look desperate.
Know how to write. Really, it helps.
Spend time thinking. Writing’s only about 20% of the job. Sometimes less.
There are no rules. Your job is to break the rules.
Be wise. Know more than your audience about something — anything.
Cut to the chase. The average attention span of the modern human is about half as long as whatever you’re trying to tell him (or her).
Get a life. Breadth of knowledge is good, emotional depth is even better.
Lie about everything except passion. Chairs can talk. Pigs can fly. But if you don’t care about what you’re saying, no one else will either.
Listen to what other people have to say. If fifteen people say that your shoe is dull, heavy and cloddish, it probably is.
But…when a publisher says ‘that sort of book doesn’t sell,’ don’t throw it away. No one knows what sells. Until it does.
Don’t worry about your connections (or lack thereof). Anyone who’s really good will get there. Blind, dogged persistence passes the time between now and then.
Edit ruthlessly. Do not fall in love with your own prose. God invented the delete button to help you.
Keep at it. It’s a long game (ask Mary Berry about her 30 years in the wilderness). No one has an easy run from beginning to end.And that goes for life as well as writing.