Write from your
heart. Even if two people in your
critique group say your book isn’t commercial. So what? There
are plenty of uncommercial books out there that are getting good reviews and
winning awards and finding their way into children’s hands.
Write from your
heart. Even if your husband isn’t
sure who the audience will be for your story. Who made him an authority?
Write the story that matters most to you. The one you couldn’t imagine not telling. Write recklessly, ravenously from your
heart.
Protect your story
as you would your own child. Never
let anyone harm it. Never let
anyone dishonor it or dishonor you for having the courage to come from your
heart. Draw your story from your
deepest well. Drop a bucket into
your soul. Even if you have to do
it one thousand times. Drop a
bucket into your soul and pull, pull with all your might. Use every last bit of strength that you
have as an artist, as a teller of the truth.
Never waver from
the conviction that the story you want to tell is the one you should be
telling. Not to say it can’t be
improved, not to you say you’re not open to suggestions. You know it’s not perfect. You know it still needs work. And you’re willing to do the work. There’s nothing you love more that
improving the story that you were born to tell, the one you can’t stop thinking
about, can’t stop creating, you know, the one that comes from your heart.
Brilliant, James! Tell the story only you can tell.
ReplyDeleteSo good. Sometimes it can feel overwhelming to think: will this sell? What is it's marketability? Great reminder of why we do what we do.
ReplyDeleteA manifesto every writer should read. Thank you, James.
ReplyDeleteMust share!
ReplyDeleteI agree!!!
DeleteWonderful, James! Especially since I have 2 first draft documents open on my computer right now languishing with many of the insecurities you list above. Thank you for posting!
ReplyDeleteLovely, James! Thank you!
ReplyDelete