Are You Willing To Write Bad to Get Good?

Important Concept

Please excuse the poor grammar in this title, but I wanted to grab your attention.  For anyone who wants to become a published novelist, this is a very important concept to grasp.

Be A Novelist Let me ask you as question.  Do you marvel as you sit in a concert hall and listen to a concert violinist make a Vivaldi concerto  spring to life?  Do you sit transfixed in front of the TV as an Olympic gymnast, or perhaps an ice skater, finishes a flawless performance?  Do you gasp as the NBA star sinks the winning basket just as the buzzer sounds?

Now think about this.  Do you really believe the concert violinist never made a squawk at the worst moment? Did the gymnast or the skater never take a bad fall?  Did the NBA star ever miss a few baskets and maybe lost the game?

Of course, you know the answer.

They were all willing to perform less-than-perfectly (over and over and over again), before they became star performers.  Could writing well demand less?

Is Novel Writing any Different?

In the years of my writing career, I’m often asked the question, “How many books have you written?”  My answer is always: “How many books have I written, or how many books have I had published?  Because I have written many more than have ever been published.”

Interpreted, that says, I was willing to write really bad stuff (which languishes either in my bulging file cabinets, or deep in the bowels of my computer), in order to learn how to write well!

It is amazing to me how beginning writers look at the talent of becoming a novelist differently than other skills.  The idea seems to be that if you have a good novel  in mind, then all that needs to be done is simply transfer it from your head onto the paper. (Or the computer – whichever!)

Wrong Question

Throughout my writing career, I’ve had many (read that MANY) people ask the question, “How do you get a book published?”

However, I can recall very few who asked, “How do I learn to write a high-quality, professional novel that is worthy of publication?” Sadly, few people think in those terms.

Writing is a talent.  It requires a certain set of skills.  It’s a talent that can be honed and developed.  It is a set of skills that can be learned.  But if you’re truly set on becoming a novelist, you must be willing to “write a lot of bad to get good.”

Read, Read, Read; Write, Write, Write

If you have a heart to write, then write.  And write.  And write some more.  The age-old admonition still holds true:  “Read, read, read and write, write, write.”  Steep yourself in the type of literature in which you long to excel.  Also read the classics.  Read the King James Bible (nowhere will you find more beautiful prose than in the KJV).  Love novels?  Read novels. (Preferably quality, well-written novels.)  Read what you love.  But read.  This is how you learn to hear the rhythms and patterns of words in your inner ear.  (Your mind’s ear, if you will.)

Develop a sincere fascination with words.  Learn to love how they are arranged.  How they can be rearranged.  How they can stop and go, and ebb and flow.  How sentences can be short and long.  How tones can be soft and hard.  If this is a joy to you, you are well on your way to becoming a great “novice/intern” novelist!  From this point, your growth and development WILL happen.

Now make this your writing lifestyle and you will be a novelist!

If you’re sinking in the morass, you may be a prime candidate for a book-writing coaching program. Click below for a free consultation.

Clean Teen ReadsBe A NovelistTired of the struggle writing your book? Need a helping hand? Norma Jean’s Coaching Services may be the answer you’re looking for. Fill out the questionnaire on the page and let’s see if we’re a right fit. A FREE consultation gets the ball rolling. (Or the pen writing!) Click HERE!

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Did you know? The 1st title in the Norma Jean Lutz Classic Collection is always a FREE Kindle download? You didn’t? Well now you do. What  are your waiting for? Click this little link right HERE and enjoy Flower in the Hills!

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Research for “Brought To You By The Color Drab”: Behind Bars–The Slammer

Be A NovelistI don’t do well in tight places. Am I claustrophobic? Perhaps just a bit. I do remember about fifteen years ago I had an MRI. I’ve been told that the technology for these contraptions have been much improved, but when I underwent this procedure, there was barely six inches between my nose and the “roof” of that cylindrical torture chamber. I can tell you I was absolutely terrified.

When researching for my latest novel, Brought To You By The Color Drab, I asked the kindly probation officer (whom I had located to interview), to show me the cells in the juvenile detention center.

Drab Cell

I know these officers have busy schedules, but he agreed to give me the tour. I was amazed at how austere (drab?) the cell was. As I stepped inside, the probation officer asked, “Do you want me to shut the door?”

Can you guess my answer? It was a vehement “NO.” And I quickly stepped outside the cell. It was a ghastly thought—the idea of being shut in that small space.

Enduring the Sally Port 

Years ago, I was involved in prison ministry. When we went in to visit, they have what’s called a “sally port.” The definition: a secure, controlled entryway to a fortification or prison.

The officer unlocks a gate and leads the group into a small enclosure. Then that gate is locked behind us. They wait a few minutes. Then they unlock the gate at the opposite end of the enclosure and we file out and enter into the main prison area.

No matter how many times I went in, I never got used to the sound of that gate “slamming” behind us. My heart rate went up, my hands got all sweaty, and my stomach did flip flops.

Easy and Extremely Difficult

The scene where my main character, Race, spends the night in the slammer was both easy and extremely difficult for me to write. Easy because I so related with that horrific feeling of being shut in; and extremely difficult because I so related with that horrific feeling of being shut in—if you get my drift.

Uncle Dutch Says, “Don’t ever Come Here” 

Prison/jail/detention, whatever, is not a nice place. It’s no wonder Uncle Dutch told Race, “Don’t ever come here!”

Who’s Uncle Dutch? Well, you’ll just have to read Brought To You By The Color Drab  to find out!

If Brought To You By The Color Drab sounds fascinating to you, take a minute and download the first two chapters right here!

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Download Chapters 1 & 2 of Color Drab FREE.

Just CLICK HERE!

 

Clean Teen ReadsBe A NovelistTired of the struggle writing your book? Need a helping hand? Norma Jean’s Coaching Services may be the answer you’re looking for. Fill out the questionnaire on the page and let’s see if we’re a right fit. A FREE consultation gets the ball rolling. (Or the pen writing!) Click HERE!

Clean Teen Reads

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