Stephen King on writing; why he never uses a notebook and other tips from the top!
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Keywords: Stephen King (Author), Creative Writing (Field Of Study), Writing (Interest), creative writing advice, creative writing inspiration, character, plot, notebooks, ideas, writers process, nicola monaghan, Creative Writing lessons, Creative Writing tips, Creative Writing Lecture, creative writing for beginners, writing advice, writing tips from famous authors, writing tips, how to write a book, the write channel, authortube
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Length: 7min 40sec (460 seconds)
Published: Sat Jan 24 2015
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I understand where he's coming from, but I have to keep a notebook for two reasons.
I forget things constantly. Even the good ideas. I know this, because I'll think "man this idea is so good there's no way I'll forget it." And then the only thing I'll remember will be that thought.
My thoughts are often very disorganised, and I need to write things down to give them structure. Otherwise everything I produce would be haphazard and riddled with continuity errors.
I find that if I don't put something down in words, sometimes it becomes frustrating when it's time to write about it. Maybe my thoughts are too abstract for me, but often if I jot down something quickly I'm able to pin point the part of my idea that matters - rather than having some jumbled picture to work off.
Putting those main points of my idea down, helps me to develop it further in my head. Putting it on paper helps get rid of the unimportant parts, and helps me expand on the parts that matter. Sort of the opposite of how it works for him.
Also, I personally am not a huge fan of Stephan King's writing style. I cannot deny that he is exceptional, but it's just not for me. The more I read about his writing process/advice, the more I wonder if it's to do with the way he creates his story more so than his actual story. I'd be interested to know how other people feel about his works in comparison to how they feel about his writing process. But now I'm rambling on, which is what happens when I free write and don't jot notes down ;)
I'm a simple man. I see Stephen King, I upvote.
Eh, that's what works for him. I personally have gone back over my random ideas (which I wrote down) and been astounded at how good some of the ones I forgot about were. An idea notebook is only a bad idea if you think that you're eternally wed to everything you jot down. But that can happen with ideas that you don't write down either.
Another point is that sometimes just writing it down gives you a different perspective of it. Same with saying it out loud to someone. If your process doesn't involve either of those things, great, but there are lots of people who benefit from them.
This is definitely something that is going to vary between writers.
I keep a notebook, but I don't use it as a reference guide. There's something about sitting down and writing out an idea by hand that can expose problems in a way that thinking does not.
I tend to be a very visual person, so the ideas in my head often feel strong and it's the paper that threatens them.
This might work for Stephen King. I am no Stephen King.
I recently was reading through some story ideas I wrote months ago, and one in particular was so damn good I couldn't believe I came up with it. I need more of whatever was going through my head that day! :)
Not every piece of advice from successful writers will work for everyone. This is a guessing game. THE guessing game. Pick a strategy and go with itβfind out for yourself if it works or not.
Another "writer" with an even more extreme approach is Jay-Z, who never writes his lyrics for songs down. He composes them entirely in his head then goes into the studio, under the assumption that "If I forget it, it wasn't that good". Also, even if I mostly work the way King does, I do have a Dream Notebook since dreams can be easily forgotten if I don't write about them right away, and I frequently pull from it for imagery in my books.
The good idea's stay do stay. While keeping a notebook for many writers is helpful and I do advise it just because writers don't all think alike. However, I never write down the random ideas that may pop up in my head. I don't like wasting my time with something I know I'm not going to write.
If I truly like an idea, I'm going to stick with it. I adopted a 2 week roll around for story ideas in my head so I'll write on the things I want. If the idea survives, I've a winner, if I abandon it within two days, forget it, then it wasn't interesting enough to me to write. Novel writing is a time commitment and I want to work on the story ideas I know I will finish.