90 Secrets from Successful Authors :3
INSPIRATION & IDEAS
—No. 1—
“Every idea is my last. I feel sure of
it. So, I try to do the best with each as it comes and that’s where my
responsibility ends. But I just don’t wait for ideas. I look for them.
Constantly. And if I don’t use the ideas that I find, they’re going to
quit showing up.”
—Peg Bracken
—No. 2—
“If you stuff yourself full of poems,
essays, plays, stories, novels, films, comic strips, magazines, music,
you automatically explode every morning like Old Faithful. I have never
had a dry spell in my life, mainly because I feed myself well, to the
point of bursting. I wake early and hear my morning voices leaping
around in my head like jumping beans. I get out of bed quickly, to trap
them before they escape.”
—Ray Bradbury
—No. 3—
“Good writing is remembering detail.
Most people want to forget. Don’t forget things that were painful or
embarrassing or silly. Turn them into a story that tells the truth.”
—Paula Danziger
—No. 4—
“I have never felt like I was creating
anything. For me, writing is like walking through a desert and all at
once, poking up through the hardpan, I see the top of a chimney. I know
there’s a house under there, and I’m pretty sure that I can dig it up if
I want. That’s how I feel. It’s like the stories are already there.
What they pay me for is the leap of faith that says: ‘If I sit down and
do this, everything will come out OK.’”
—Stephen King
—No. 5—
“A writer need not devour a whole sheep
in order to know what mutton tastes like, but he must at least eat a
chop. Unless he gets his facts right, his imagination will lead him into
all kinds of nonsense, and the facts he is most likely to get right are
the facts of his own experience.”
—W. Somerset Maugham
—No. 6—
“Don’t put down too many roots in terms
of a domicile. I have lived in four countries and I think my life as a
writer and our family’s life have been enriched by this. I think a
writer has to experience new environments. There is that adage: No man
can really succeed if he doesn’t move away from where he was born. I
believe it is particularly true for the writer.”
—Arthur Hailey
—No. 7—
“Sit and quiet yourself. Luxuriate in a
certain memory and the details will come. Let the images flow. You’ll be
amazed at what will come out on paper. I’m still learning what it is
about the past that I want to write. I don’t worry about it. It will
emerge. It will insist on being told.”
—Frank McCourt
—No. 8—
“My advice is not to wait to be struck
by an idea. If you’re a writer, you sit down and damn well decide to
have an idea. That’s the way to get an idea.”
—Andy Rooney
—No. 9—
“As writers we live life twice, like a
cow that eats its food once and then regurgitates it to chew and digest
it again. We have a second chance at biting into our experience and
examining it. … This is our life and it’s not going to last forever.
There isn’t time to talk about someday writing that short story or poem
or novel. Slow down now, touch what is around you, and out of care and
compassion for each moment and detail, put pen to paper and begin to
write.”
—Natalie Goldberg
GETTING STARTED
—No. 10—
“I have a self-starter—published 20 million words—and have never received, needed or wanted a kick in the pants.”
—Isaac Asimov
—No. 11—
“Two questions form the foundation of
all novels: ‘What if?’ and ‘What next?’ (A third question, ‘What now?’,
is one the author asks himself every 10 minutes or so; but it’s more a
cry than a question.) Every novel begins with the speculative question,
What if ‘X’ happened? That’s how you start.”
—Tom Clancy
—No. 12—
“I think my stuff succeeds, in part,
because of what it’s about—a diagnosis by attempting the adventures
oneself of universal American daydreams. Now, I’m not saying that any
writer who decided to select that device or notion could have written a
bestseller; you have to add ingredients that are very special, I agree,
but I think I started out with a good pot to make the stew in.”
—George Plimpton
—No. 13—
“Beginning a novel is always hard. It
feels like going nowhere. I always have to write at least 100 pages that
go into the trashcan before it finally begins to work. It’s
discouraging, but necessary to write those pages. I try to consider them
pages -100 to zero of the novel.”
—Barbara Kingsolver
—No. 14—
“When I start on a book, I have been
thinking about it and making occasional notes for some time—20 years in
the case of Imperial Earth, and 10 years in the case of the novel I’m
presently working on. So I have lots of theme, locale, subjects and
technical ideas. It’s amazing how the subconscious self works on these
things. I don’t worry about long periods of not doing anything. I know
my subconscious is busy.”
—Arthur C. Clarke
—No. 15—
“An outline is crucial. It saves so
much time. When you write suspense, you have to know where you’re going
because you have to drop little hints along the way. With the outline, I
always know where the story is going. So before I ever write, I prepare
an outline of 40 or 50 pages.”
—John Grisham
—No. 16—
“I do a great deal of research. I don’t
want anyone to say, ‘That could not have happened.’ It may be fiction,
but it has to be true.”
—Jacquelyn Mitchard
—No. 17—
“Being goal-oriented instead of
self-oriented is crucial. I know so many people who want to be writers.
But let me tell you, they really don’t want to be writers. They want to
have been writers. They wish they had a book in print. They don’t want
to go through the work of getting the damn book out. There is a huge
difference.”
—James Michener
—No. 18—
“Don’t quit. It’s very easy to quit
during the first 10 years. Nobody cares whether you write or not, and
it’s very hard to write when nobody cares one way or the other. You
can’t get fired if you don’t write, and most of the time you don’t get
rewarded if you do. But don’t quit.”
—Andre Dubus
—No. 19—
“Writing is like being in love. You
never get better at it or learn more about it. The day you think you do
is the day you lose it. Robert Frost called his work a lover’s quarrel
with the world. It’s ongoing. It has neither a beginning nor an end. You
don’t have to worry about learning things. The fire of one’s art burns
all the impurities from the vessel that contains it.”
—James Lee Burke
STYLE & CRAFT
—No. 20—
“What a writer has to do is write what hasn’t been written before or beat dead men at what they have done.”
—Ernest Hemingway
—No. 21—
“You have to follow your own voice. You
have to be yourself when you write. In effect, you have to announce,
‘This is me, this is what I stand for, this is what you get when you
read me. I’m doing the best I can—buy me or not—but this is who I am as a
writer.”
—David Morrell
—No. 22—
“Oftentimes an originator of new
language forms is called ‘pretentious’ by jealous talents. But it ain’t
whatcha write, it’s the way atcha write it.”
—Jack Kerouac
—No. 23—
“I think I succeeded as a writer
because I did not come out of an English department. I used to write in
the chemistry department. And I wrote some good stuff. If I had been in
the English department, the prof would have looked at my short stories,
congratulated me on my talent, and then showed me how Joyce or Hemingway
handled the same elements of the short story. The prof would have
placed me in competition with the greatest writers of all time, and that
would have ended my writing career.”
—Kurt Vonnegut
—No. 24—
“You should really stay true to your
own style. When I first started writing, everybody said to me, ‘Your
style just isn’t right because you don’t use the really flowery language
that romances have.’ My romances—compared to what’s out there—are very
strange, very odd, very different. And I think that’s one of the reasons
they’re selling.”
—Jude Deveraux
—No. 25—
“I guess I believe that writing
consists of very small parts put together into a whole, and if the parts
are defective, the whole won’t work.”
—Garrison Keillor
—No. 26—
“I’m very concerned with the rhythm of
language. ‘The sun came up’ is an inadequate sentence. Even though it
conveys all the necessary information, rhythmically it’s lacking. The
sun came up. But, if you say, as Laurie Anderson said, ‘The sun came up
like a big bald head,’ not only have you, perhaps, entertained the fancy
of the reader, but you have made a more complete sentence. The sound of
a sentence.”
—Tom Robbins
—No. 27—
“We, and I think I’m speaking for many
writers, don’t know what it is that sometimes comes to make our books
alive. All we can do is to write dutifully and day after day, every day,
giving our work the very best of what we are capable. I don’t think
that we can consciously put the magic in; it doesn’t work that way. When
the magic comes, it’s a gift.”
—Madeleine L’Engle
PURPOSE
—No. 28—
“The only obligation any artist can have is to himself. His work means nothing, otherwise. It has no meaning.”
—Truman Capote
—No. 29—
“Indeed, great fiction shows us not how
to conduct our behavior but how to feel. Eventually, it may show us how
to face our feelings and face our actions and to have new inklings
about what they mean. A good novel of any year can initiate us into our
own new experience.”
—Eudora Welty
—No. 30—
“You need that pride in yourself, as
well as a sense, when you are sitting on Page 297 of a book, that the
book is going to be read, that somebody is going to care. You can’t ever
be sure about that, but you need the sense that it’s important, that
it’s not typing; it’s writing.”
—Roger Kahn
—No. 31—
“They have to be given some meaning,
the facts. What do they mean? The meaning’s going to be influenced by a
lot of things in you and your own culture. And some of these things you
may be unaware of. But every historian has some kind of philosophy of
life and society. … All kinds of strands and currents and factors are
involved. You have to separate and put together and from that we should
deduce that there’s no situation in the present that’s simple, either.
No simple answers. And the historian, when he looks over one of these
situations, is going to try and consider all these things and try to be
objective and fair and balanced, but what he picks out as the meaning
will, of course, be what he himself believes.”
—T. Harry Williams
—No. 32—
“I’ve always had complete confidence in
myself. When I was nothing, I had complete confidence. There were 10
guys in my writing class at Williams College who could write better than
I. They didn’t have what I have, which is guts. I was dedicated to
writing, and nothing could stop me.”
—John Toland
—No. 33—
“I write in a very confessional way,
because to me it’s so exciting and fun. There’s nothing funnier on earth
than our humanness and our monkeyness. There’s nothing more touching,
and it’s what I love to come upon when I’m reading; someone who’s gotten
really down and dirty, and they’re taking the dross of life and doing
alchemy, turning it into magic, tenderness and compassion and hilarity.
So I tell my students that if they really love something, pay attention
to it. Try to write something that they would love to come upon.”
—Anne Lamott
—No. 34—
“[The writer] has to be the kind of man who turns the world upside down and says, lookit, it looks different, doesn’t it?”
—Morris West
—No. 35—
“The real writer learns nothing from life. He is more like an oyster or a sponge.”
—Gore Vidal
—No. 36—
“I think most writers … write about
episodes meaningful to them in terms of their own imaginations. Now that
would include a great deal of what they experience, but I’m not sure
there’s an autobiographical intention. … I believe I’m telling the truth
when I say that, when I wrote Catch-22, I was not particularly
interested in war; I was mainly interested in writing a novel, and that
was a subject for it. That’s been true of all my books. Now what goes
into these books does reflect a great deal of my more morbid nature—the
fear of dying, a great deal of social awareness and social protest,
which is part of my personality. None of that is the objective of
writing. Take five writers who have experienced the same thing, and they
will be completely different as people, and they’d be completely
different in what they do write, what they’re able to write.”
—Joseph Heller
CHARACTERS
—No. 37—
“A genuine creation should have
character as well as be one; should have central heating, so to say, as
well as exterior lighting.”
—James Hilton
—No. 38—
“The writer must always leave room for
the characters to grow and change. If you move your characters from plot
point to plot point, like painting by the numbers, they often remain
stick figures. They will never take on a life of their own. The most
exciting thing is when you find a character doing something surprising
or unplanned. Like a character saying to me: ‘Hey, Richard, you may
think I work for you, but I don’t. I’m my own person.’”
—Richard North Patterson
—No. 39—
“Writers shouldn’t fall in love with
characters so much that they lose sight of what they’re trying to
accomplish. The idea is to write a whole story, a whole book. A writer
has to be able to look at that story and see whether or not a character
works, whether or not a character needs further definition.”
—Stephen Coonts
—No. 40—
“When I was a Hollywood press agent, I
learned how the Hollywood casting system worked. There was a roster of
actors who were always perfect as doctors or lawyers or laborers, and
the directors just picked the types they needed and stuffed them into
film after film. I do the same [with
my characters], book after book.”
—Richard Condon
—No. 41—
“I said the hell with Plot. I’m going
to write stories about people that interest me, the way I see them. I’m
sick of formula. I’m sick of Hero, Heroine, Heavy. … I’m sick of
Characters. I’m going to write about men and women, all classes, types
and conditions, within the limits of my own capabilities. People with
faults, with nasty tempers, with weaknesses and loves and hates and
fears and gripes against each other. People I can believe in because I
know and understand them. People who aren’t like anybody else’s
characters because they are themselves, like ‘em or don’t. … And all of a
sudden I began to sell.”
—Leigh Brackett
—No. 42—
“When you are dealing with the blackest
side of the human soul, you have to have someone who has performed
heroically to balance that out. You have to have a hero.”
—Ann Rule
—No. 43—
“People do not spring forth out of the
blue, fully formed—they become themselves slowly, day by day, starting
from babyhood. They are the result of both environment and heredity, and
your fictional characters, in order to be believable, must be also.”
—Lois Duncan
—No. 44—
“To me, everything in a novel comes
down to people making choices. You must figure out in advance what those
choices are going to be.”
—Marion Zimmer Bradley
—No. 45—
“The character on the page determines
the prose—its music, its rhythms, the range and limit of its
vocabulary—yet, at the outset at least, I determine the character. It
usually happens that the fictitious character, once released, acquires a
life and will of his or her own, so the prose, too, acquires its own
inexplicable fluidity. This is one of the reasons I write: to ‘hear’ a
voice not quite my own, yet summoned forth by way of my own.”
—Joyce Carol Oates
PLOT & STRUCTURE
—No. 46—
“For a book to really work, form and
function must go hand in hand, just like with buildings, as any decent
architect will tell you.”
—Tracy Chevalier
—No. 47—
“The problem for me is finding my own
plots. They take a long time. … I like to have it happen, just like in
our own lives. We don’t always know where they’re going, and if we make
formal decisions on a given night, if we sit down and put a list of
things we’re going to do on a piece of paper, they almost never work out
right.”
—Norman Mailer
—No. 48—
“There is no finer form of fiction than
the mystery. It has structure, a story line and a sense of place and
pace. It is the one genre where the reader and the writer are pitted
against each other. Readers don’t want to guess the ending, but they
don’t want to be so baffled that it annoys them. … The research you do
is crucial. In mystery fiction, you have to tell the truth. You can’t
fool the reader and expect to get away with it.”
—Sue Grafton
—No. 49—
“Sometimes one can overanalyze, and I
try not to do that. To a great degree, much of the structure has got to
come naturally out of the writing. I think if you try to preordain,
you’re going to stifle yourself. You’ve got a general idea, but the rest
has to come naturally out of the writing, the narrative, the character
and the situation.”
—Robert Ludlum
—No. 50—
“I make a very tight outline of
everything I write before I write it. … By writing an outline you really
are writing in a way, because you’re creating the structure of what
you’re going to do. Once I really know what I’m going to write, I don’t
find the actual writing takes all that long.”
—Tom Wolfe
—No. 51—
“We’re past the age of heroes and hero
kings. If we can’t make up stories about ordinary people, who can we
make them up about? … Most of our lives are basically mundane and dull,
and it’s up to the writer to find ways to make them interesting.”
—John Updike
—No. 52—
“Too many writers think that all you
need to do is write well—but that’s only part of what a good book is.
Above all, a good book tells a good story. Focus on the story first. Ask
yourself, ‘Will other people find this story so interesting that they
will tell others about it?’ Remember: A bestselling book usually follows
a simple rule, ‘It’s a wonderful story, wonderfully told’; not, ‘It’s a
wonderfully told story.’”
—Nicholas Sparks
—No. 53—
“Transitions are critically important. I
want the reader to turn the page without thinking she’s turning the
page. It must flow seamlessly.”
—Janet Evanovich
RITUALS & METHODS
—No. 54—
“Write. Rewrite. When not writing or rewriting, read. I know of no shortcuts.”
—Larry L. King
—No. 55—
“When I really do not know what I am
saying, or how to say it, I’ll open these Pentels, these colored
Japanese pens, on yellow lined paper, and I’ll start off with very
tentative colors, very light colors: orange, yellow or tan. … When my
thoughts are more formulated, and I have a sharper sense of trying to
say it, I’ll go into heavier colors: blues, greens and eventually into
black. When I am writing in black, which is the final version, I have
written that sentence maybe 12 or 15 or 18 times.”
—Gay Talese
—No. 56—
“I think that the joy of writing a
novel is the self-exploration that emerges and also that wonderful
feeling of playing God with the characters. When I sit down at my
writing desk, time seems to vanish. … I think the most important thing
for a writer is to be locked in a study.”
—Erica Jong
—No. 57—
“I’ll tell you a thing that will shock
you. It will certainly shock the readers of Writer’s Digest. What I
often do nowadays when I have to, say, describe a room, is to take a
page of a dictionary, any page at all, and see if with the words
suggested by that one page in the dictionary I can build up a room,
build up a scene. … I even did it in a novel I wrote called MF. There’s a
description of a hotel vestibule whose properties are derived from Page
167 in R.J. Wilkinson’s Malay-English Dictionary. Nobody has noticed. …
As most things in life are arbitrary anyway, you’re not doing anything
naughty, you’re really normally doing what nature does, you’re just
making an entity out of the elements. I do recommend it to young
writers.”
—Anthony Burgess
—No. 58—
“The conclusion to be drawn is that I
am happiest writing in small rooms. They make me feel comfortable and
secure. And it took me years to figure out that I need to write in a
corner. Like a small animal burrowing into its hole, I shift furniture
around, and back myself into a cozy corner, with my back to the wall …
and then I can write.”
—Danielle Steel
—No. 59—
“I try to keep my space very, very
contained, because I feel that inspiration and the spirits and the story
and the characters live there for as long as I’m writing.”
—Isabel Allende
—No. 60—
“If I’m at a dull party I’ll invent
some kind of game for myself and then pick someone to play it with so
that I am, in effect, writing a scene. I’m supplying my half of the
dialogue and hoping the other half comes up to standards. If it doesn’t,
I try to direct it that way.”
—Evan Hunter
—No. 61—
“I like to say there are three things
that are required for success as a writer: talent, luck, discipline. …
[Discipline] is the one that you have to focus on controlling, and you
just have to hope and trust in the other two.”
—Michael Chabon
—No. 62—
“I threw the thesaurus out years ago. I
found that every time you look up a word, if you want some word and you
can think of an approximately close synonym for it and look it up, you
only get cliché usages. It’s much better to use a big dictionary and
look up derivations and definitions of various usages of a different
word.”
—James Jones
—No. 63—
“I try to write a certain amount each day, five days a week. A rule sometimes broken is better than no rule.”
—Herman Wouk
—No. 64—
“I think writing verse is a great
training for a writer. It teaches you to make your points and get your
stuff clear, which is the great thing.”
—P.G. Wodehouse
REVISION & EDITING
—No. 65—
“I do not rewrite unless I am absolutely sure that I can express the material better if I do rewrite it.”
—William Faulkner
—No. 66—
“… Falsely straining yourself to put
something into a book where it doesn’t really belong, it’s not doing
anybody any favors. And the reader can tell.”
—Margaret Atwood
—No. 67—
“I’m a tremendous rewriter; I never
think anything is good enough. I’m always rephrasing jokes, changing
lines, and then I hate everything. The Girl Most Likely To was rewritten
seven times, and the first time I saw it I literally went out and threw
up! How’s that for liking yourself?”
—Joan Rivers
—No. 68—
“I’ve always felt that my ‘style’—the
careful projection onto paper of who I think I am—was my only marketable
asset, the only possession that might set me apart from other writers.
Therefore I’ve never wanted anyone to fiddle with it. … Editors have
told me that I’m the only writer they know who cares what happens to his
piece after he gets paid for it. Most writers won’t argue with an
editor because they don’t want to annoy him; they’re so grateful to be
published that they agree to having their style … violated in public.
But to defend what you’ve written is a sign that you are alive.”
—William Zinsser
—No. 69—
“I almost always write everything the
way it comes out, except I tend much more to take things out rather than
put things in. It’s out of a desire to really show what’s going on at
all times, how things smell and look, as well as from the knowledge that
I don’t want to push things too quickly through to climax; if I do, it
won’t mean anything. Everything has to be earned, and it takes a lot of
work to earn.”
—Peter Straub
—No. 70—
“If you’re writing for a magazine or a
newspaper, then you’re a guest. It’s as if you’re a guest violinist in
some great conductor’s orchestra. You play to his rhythm, to his
audience. You’re invited in and he edits you and tells you what he
wants. On the other hand, when you’re writing a book, the only reason
you’re writing it is to say it your own way, in your own words, and tell
the story the way you see it.”
—Teddy White
—No. 71—
“There’s really a shortage of good
freelance writers. … There are a lot of talented people who are very
erratic, so either they don’t turn it in or they turn it in and it’s
rotten; it’s amazing. Somebody who’s even maybe not all that terrific
but who is dependable, who will turn in a publishable piece more or less
on time, can really do very well.”
—Gloria Steinem
PUBLISHING
—No. 72—
“One of my agents used to say to me, ‘Mack, you shouldn’t submit anything anywhere unless you [would] read it aloud to them.’ ”
—MacKinlay Kantor
—No. 73—
“If you have the story, editors will
use it. I agree it’s hard. You’re battling a system. But it’s fun to do
battle with systems.”
—Bob Woodward
—No. 74—
“Publishers want to take chances on
books that will draw a clamor and some legitimate publicity. They want
to publish controversial books. That their reasons are mercenary and
yours may be lofty should not deter you.”
—Harlan Ellison
—No. 75—
“I would advise anyone who aspires to a
writing career that before developing his talent he would be wise to
develop a thick hide.”
—Harper Lee
—No. 76—
“The most important thing is you can’t
write what you wouldn’t read for pleasure. It’s a mistake to analyze the
market thinking you can write whatever is hot. You can’t say you’re
going to write romance when you don’t even like it. You need to write
what you would read if you expect anybody else to read it.
And you
have to be driven. You have to have the three D’s: drive, discipline and
desire. If you’re missing any one of those three, you can have all the
talent in the world, but it’s going to be really hard to get anything
done.”
—Nora Roberts
—No. 77—
“It’s wise to plan early on where you’d
like to go, do serious self-analysis to determine what you want from a
writing career. … When I began, I thought I’d be comfortable as a
straight genre writer. I just kept switching genres as my interests
grew. I’ve since been fortunate that—with a great deal of effort—I’ve
been able to break the chains of genre labeling, and do larger and more
complex books. But it’s difficult, and few people who develop straight
genre reputations ever escape them.”
—Dean Koontz
—No. 78—
“Inevitably, you react to your own
work—you like it, you don’t like it, you think it’s interesting or
boring—and it is difficult to accept that those reactions may be
unreliable. In my experience, they are. I mistrust either wild
enthusiasm or deep depression. I have had the best success with material
that I was sort of neutral about …”
—Michael Crichton
—No. 79—
“There’s no mystique about the writing
business, although many people consider me blasphemous when I say that. …
To create something you want to sell, you first study and research the
market, then you develop the product to the best of your ability.”
—Clive Cussler
—No. 80—
“A cop told me, a long time ago, that
there’s no substitute for knowing what you’re doing. Most of us
scribblers do not. The ones that’re any good are aware of this. The rest
write silly stuff. The trouble is this: The readers know it.”
—George V. Higgins
—No. 81—
“If you can teach people something, you’ve won half the battle. They want to keep on reading.”
—Dick Francis
READERS
—No. 82—
“I don’t care if a reader hates one of my stories, just as long as he finishes the book.”
—Roald Dahl
—No. 83—
“Always remember the reader. Always
level with him and never talk down to him. You may think you’re some
kind of smart guy because you’re the great writer. Well, if you’re such a
smart guy, how come the reader is paying you? Remember the reader’s the
boss. He’s hired you to do a job. So do it.”
—Jay Anson
—No. 84—
“In truth, I never consider the audience for whom I’m writing. I just write what I want to write.” ”
—J.K. Rowling
—No. 85—
“I don’t believe one reads to escape
reality. A person reads to confirm a reality he knows is there, but
which he has not experienced.”
—Lawrence Durrell
—No. 86—
“Write out of the reader’s imagination
as well as your own. Supply the significant details and let the reader’s
imagination do the rest. Make the reader a co-author of the story.”
—Patrick F. McManus
—No. 87—
“The critics can make fun of Barbara
Cartland. I was quite amused by the critic who once called me ‘an
animated meringue.’ But they can’t get away from the fact that I know
what women want—and that’s to be flung across a man’s saddle, or into
the long grass by a loving husband.”
—Barbara Cartland
—No. 88—
“You better make them care about what
you think. It had better be quirky or perverse or thoughtful enough so
that you hit some chord in them. Otherwise it doesn’t work. I mean we’ve
all read pieces where we thought, ‘Oh, who gives a damn.’ ”
—Nora Ephron
—No. 89—
“We all tell a story a different way.
I’ve always felt that footsteps on the stairs when you’re alone in the
house, and then the handle of the door turning can be scarier than the
actual confrontation. So, as a result, I’m on the reading list from age
13 to 90.”
—Mary Higgins Clark
—No. 90—
“To gain your own voice, you have to
forget about having it heard. Renounce that and you get your own voice
automatically. Try to become a saint of your own province and your own
consciousness, and you won’t worry about being heard in The New York Times.”
—Allen Ginsberg
Bookmarking!!
ReplyDelete