0:03 Jonathan Franzen 1:16 Lydia Davis 1:40 Alaa Al-Aswany 1:57 Herbjørg Wassmo 2:15 Richard Ford 3:05 Lars Norén 3:59 Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o 5:14 Umberto Eco 5:32 Patti Smith 6:06 Sjón 8:52 Kjell Askildsen
Patience really is the foundation of writing. It took me 30 years to convince myself I really could and should write. It took me an additional five years to publish something. If I didn't have a massive amount of patience, I would not be a writer.
@@Pyro-Moloch haven't stopped writing since i was 14, if i did my mind would crumble under itself. Writing isn't always something that you decide to do one day,for some it's to let go of a certain capacity, with the only goal is to escape.
@@TobiasRo I understand that, but people are different. I like to think of myself as a writer, and if I was to abandon it, I might as well kill myself. I mean it is as important for me as it is for you. But hell, if I didn't *force* myself to get off my ass and work, I'd probably not write anything. And that doesn't make me less of a writer than anybody. Why I called this piece of advice bad is because it's gatekeeping. It may make somebody feel like, if ideas don't literally stream out of them, that makes them not a writer - and that's just not true. We're all different, there's no *right* way to feel.
*6:20** "Do not be afraid of working with things that fascinated us when we were the most impressionable."* I think that's some of the best I've heard. Stuff that first got us by our imagination or our passion as kids as so important even in adulthood, even if we haven't thought about it in years. It always remind us of that feeling of discovering a new world and realising all the possibilities of storytelling or creating and its what keeps that wonder inside for us to be able to hopefully try and give another child or person that same gateway.
This piece of advice struck a cord with me. I liked that there were many different viewpoints on the subject. Writing is messy. There isn’t a clear cut answer. It just goes to show that you should follow the advice you think is best.
Excellent! Brilliant minds reaching out. I love how two of them almost appear to talk us out of it. But what they're really saying is "If you're not passionate enough about it, don't bother." That feels like a healthy down to earth approach. It's not for everyone. Only get into it if you're ready to work for it.
I figured there would be at least one with that approach. Give you an idea, if you want something then work towards it. Let none hold you back. People will get you nowhere, you build who you are. No title creates you. You are given it for pursuing what you desire. And in the end, whether you achieve it or not. It is something you tried for, and that simply is something to be greatly admired.
I’m 15 and I found out that writing is my passion and I LOVE it so I came here looking for advice .. and yeah I am a beginner but I hope I can be like them one day❤️❤️
Hi. I'm 15 too. I have the same interests as you and really want to become an author one day. I decided to go on and reply to your comment because I wanted to talk about our dreams. Honestly, I think as long as we are determined and strive to be the best and just work hard, we'll be able to succeed. I'm someone that really worries about my future and I spend hours staring at my ceiling wondering if it's all going to be worth it. Maybe you can relate to this. So yeah, just keep your goal at the front of your mind and just keep working to improve no matter how long it takes. Patience is very important. We've got this! ❤❤
Don’t make your writing success dependent on wether it is published and sold a lot or on the critiques. Make it dependent on wether you are happy with it. Does it capture the truth you wanted to tell? Of course it is great when publishers and readers also enjoy your book but this success is dependent on so much more than just your writing skill.
my advice is just write enjoy the thought process, put it on paper, don't think it too much, if you did bad writing you will learn from it, it's a stepping stone not the end of the world. You got this
I started writing four years ago (when I was aged nine) and I have been working on my passion project for a large majority of that. It has been a wild ride with over three drafts and incredible amounts of hard work. Social life is immediately shut out for me. Writing takes the cake and I will continue hacking at my drafts until I can snag a literary agent!
The most valuable advice IMHO is the one given by Ms Wassmo at 2:01 which is to not give up even if you have days and weeks where you loose faith in your abilities...
This has to be my Most Loved piece on the vocation of writing. This set of interviews has worked a miracle in my life in a matter of 11 minutes and 22 seconds. A private miracle significant only to me, and one I'm experiencing alone, as no one who knows me takes my need to write seriously. No one I know supports my love of writing, nor do they care what it means to me. It's always other writers, you know? This set of writers touched my heart, and comforted my soul. Their words stirred my will to write again. Just like that. I found myself forgetting to breath for moments at a time...as though the slightest sound, even the steady whispering of breathing, would keep me from hearing their words, from being edified by the interviewees' wisdom. I was spellbound. And enraptured by the gravity of their countenances. Did anyone else totally love the advice spoken in other languages? It was the advice of those writers I found to be the most heartfelt, sincere. The most profound. This genius set of interviews managed to renew my love of writing, to feed my anemic confidence, to cut through the suffocating doubt I've breathed for three years. The messages of the interviewees stirred my blood into a roiling boil of urgency, and stoked the smoking embers of my love for writing into snapping, crackling flames. While the darkness has been parted, the flames have been stoked, and the desire is urgent, I need to write. Like NOW. :) Thanks for the creatively edited video! I'll never forget it. And sorry for leaving a post filled with purple-prose and sentimental drivel.
Some of this advice I think is great, and some of it I think is potentially either beneficial or dangerous, depending on your actual goals. A good chunk of the advice seems to fall into one of two categories: "You've just gotta believe in yourself and it will come to you!" or "Don't do it unless you're willing to spend every second writing, and then you'll probably still fail." I think everyone should ask themselves exactly what they're wanting to get out of writing. Are you wanting to quit your job and become a famous author? Are you doing it on the side because you enjoy it? If you truly want nothing else in the world than to write, as a profession, to the point that you're going to quit your job and gamble everything...then sentimental dream-seeking advice is something to be weary of. While I don't think you should ever begin something so ambitious feeling discouraged and deflated, the advice about perseverance and reality-checking is, I think, more valuable in this case. However, if writing is something you're interested in as a hobby, then I think the "Give all or give up" mentality is TERRIBLE. Nobody should be shut down from exploring a new hobby because they're not especially talented or willing to drop the rest of their life for it. That said, I do think that particular advice was likely aimed at people pursuing the dream of being on Ellen bragging about their new best seller. Think this relates to music. You know, you're probably not going to be the next American Idol or famous rock band, but there's nothing stopping you from singing in the shower, or gathering up a group of friends to jam with, and maybe even play at a small house party, or make something of value, even if it's only valuable to 25 people. You can still create and share something that leaves you with a sense of fulfillment. You don't have to find a mass audience to do that.
Well, its simple. You like reading books, you eventually will try to write them too. Its fun? I don't think so, atleast not all of it. Its a mess if you ask me, each one of us have awasome story in our head but to actually bring them on paper is lot of work, guess that what differentiates reader from writers. Like Out of 10, 8 think they can write, 6 of them will try, 3 of them eventually get stuck after 3 or 4 chapter ( they will kill there story because of self-criticism, comparison, inconsistency, impatience etc etc) remained 3 will keep daydreaming , staring at blank page. Out of remaining, well I believe 1or 2 will actually able to complete the rough novel. Moral of the fact is just keep writing but don't fuck your life over it, if you don't get any success. Note: Pretty sure I am of those three people who have write 3 or 4 chapters then gave up! So many incomplete stories 🤔😐
This is true. I managed to finish my drafts, but it was difficult and a lot of work. My friends who tried fell behind and I was the only one who gathered success. Writing comes with hard work, that’s simple.
What I learned here, is that the best advice is your own advice.everyone has contradictory advice from each other; and so selecting the right advice is up to your own judgement, regardless of what the pessimistic or optimistic writer says. Only you can think for your self.
For anyone who doesn’t think hard work trumps talent, look up Larry Brown. He was a high school drop out who wrote five unpublished novels and hundreds of short stories before he got published.
That first bit of advice is so important. Having fun while writing is the reason why we all started in the first place and should be the reason why we all do it.
Sacha wilder I think it was an foreign language interpretation problem. Maybe he meant a "great desire, or need to write" by talent. That's what it sounded like to me as I was listening.
6:06 to 6:56 100% - Returning to our roots of inspiration, in combination with trying out a totally fresh medium, is what I am going to commit to in order to hopefully exorcise the disillusionment art school has left me with. 7:47 to 8:50 ; 10:08 to 10:49 ! There were great pieces of advice throughout the montage, but Sjón really hit the nail on the head of what mattered most for me to hear.
It's funny to hear how advice can be so contradictory. In the end it's our very self who decides what's best. Listen closely to your heart and keep your lightness towards yourself and others. Writing is a great communication tool and if you won't succeed as a writer, at least you'll be equipped with this powerful tool.
I find that when I'm happy my book becomes happy and when I'm sad my book becomes so. My goal is to one day get a book published I'm working on one right now. I really pour my heart and my soul into my story's
Most of these are much like what DFW said when he talked about Lynch, how a great artist is truly sincere and just doesn't give a damn. He doesn't think what makes a good artist, he is an artist. "Stop talking about what a good man is, be one" -Marcus Aurelius.
Don't listen. Best advice is to get into something you wanna soak your teeth in. And fuck people who give 'advice' to scare people away who are just starting out. A waste of your time.
If they would regretted they would just say it directly, but if is an advise for others that may regret it in the future, I feel that they are just scare of the new generation being better 😅
I think we need to demystify writing as if it’s passed down from the heavens through muses or that it’s for the obsessive manic who must write to get the madness out of their soul. It’s work. Have fun. Keep practicing. Get a little better each day and with each piece. My word, “if you’re not talented, don’t write”? How about write until you get talented. Geesh. My first novel sucked and I hope my next book sucks a little bit less
Yes, you can dedicate your blood, sweat, and tears to writing even if you think you're not talented or have a hard time with your Muse. If you enjoy it, you will bleed for it. And succeed.
If I had to give a young writer any piece of advice it is this...create characters that you love spending time with..when you get to your desk the next day it's exciting to see what they've been up to while you were away..you simply can't wait to get back to them..
View this only to listen to Richard Ford. All the others are delightfully vague, and (unwittingly) confess to the fact they would not know the first thing about how to actually go about the process of creative writing. And another thing - nearly all the interviewees are (Ford and Jonathan Franzen being notable exceptions) not quite successful themselves as practitioners of the art. N.B. Do make it a point to listening to Richard Ford's full interview on the Louisiana Channel: 'Art is heavy lifting.'
Thank you so much for this piece. I enjoyed it. Believe in yourself. Do not to the markets or publishers. Writing is a jealous lover you have to be yourself with it, to enjoy the relationship
Pretty much everyone I know doesnt like to Wright and they ask me why I wright and how I can wright like I do. Well here is my answer. Wrighting is my happy place whatever I feel becomes the feel of my story. I display my emotions in my story's. My story's go a lot deeper then the words on the page. I love it and I hope to one day hopefully soon get a book published that is my number one goal in life. I never wanted much in life to be honest, and I find so much joy in wrighting. Too all the other soon to be young authors I hope you accomplish all your wrighting goals!
I've learned in life that sometimes you have to decide that you want to do something then go and do it. Writing is no different than sports or music or pottery or hobby electrical engineering or building - it takes some work but if you love it you'll go a long way. If God has given you a gifting, you'll go far. By gifting I mean it's something which follows you around. You'll forget about writing for a while, and then someone will come up and say "I really liked that story you wrote last year. Are you still writing?" Or "I'm looking forward to seeing that book you're going to write." Pay attention to what you might deem coincidences. Sometimes God uses those to get our attention. Two coinciding event usually happen the same day, at least for me. I'll be thinking about music for a weekend service and someone will say to me, out of the blue "Hey, are you singing anywhere this weekend?" Or something like that.
I'm in 12th grade and I'm going to graduate in a month and I have purposely not done work to work on my novel and I absolutely do not care about any of it. Yes I finish the work but I don't it at my own pace I do not stress or force myself to get something finished I'll do it when I do it this is my potential career I'm working on I only get one chance at this
Writing is one of the possible good things about life that belong to everyone. Writers saying you should not write if you feel no huge, all consuming neccesity to, or if you 'have no talent', should just get over their ego. Is my humble opinion.
"If you're not talented. You should not write" Nobody is talented. It takes ambition to gain the talent. Otherwise nobody would ever become worthy enough to write. "Remember, best sellers doesn't mean best book or best author. It just means it sold a lot." - Grant Cardone
I am a writer and i do have the key for all of You guys.Just one and only advice that no one of You have thought of...hit me up if You need the real advice
Just a warning that some of these are really negative. The negative ones seem to be men with enormous egos (basically: "unless you're as talented as I am, and you think of writing the exact same way as I do, don't do it.") The others are more instructive.
I don’t know why people in this comment section are not talking about the writers that are focusing on talent and not hard work and I feel this video just tells you many reasons you should quit writing I don’t find it motivating or inspiring and I am only 4 minutes into this video
What they are saying is that you have to love to write, you have to give it a great deal of thought, you can’t just immediately know what to write about. Writing doesn’t have to be for everyone, just for who is good at it and love to do it.
@@alyssalawlor4730 I mean, I highly doubt that. Some people just have a gift for it. However, you can be gifted a paint set, but it is essentially useless if you do not use it. So I think he was serious with the talent thing, then expressed the importance of being madly and possessively in love with it. I hate to agree on the idea that: anyone can be a writer, but only great writers are born? But I really do not know.
Some of this is... trash. A lot of those are truly inspiring; however, I'm sorry, but some of them are just saying things that discourage people. If you want to write, do it. Practise, and practise, and sit down on your butt until you actually have something. You wouldn't stop doing a project at your job, or your homework when its already halfway done. That would be a waste. Think of your pieces of writing as children. Don't abandon them Support them, and help them, and love and nurture them until they have grown up, are ready to leave you. Don't be afraid. Be proud. And watch Alice Rice's videos on TH-cam because they are not only helpful, but also so interesting and supportive. Do it. Just write. And finish it. And then hand it in to a publisher if you want to. Be bold. You probably only have this life, and you do not want to regret having not fulfilled your dreams.
I started my literary journey just the previous year and I've been at it ever since - just wrote over two novellas, one novel and nine short stories... ... And I owe it all to Plastic Love.
Talent Storytelling comes from the bottom of your heart. Not your mind. Young writers make that mistake when they write whats on their own minds, No! You have to have a deep passion in own your heart. To become famous writer, Like James Patterson for example. He writes from the bottom of his heart. Storytelling is a gift. But don't believe what Richard says. He's a put down.
my advice is to have respect for your own work, do not go Willy nilly with your stories or characters in anyway you want, experiment a little but don't take to where it's a way to "take the piss"
0:03 Jonathan Franzen
1:16 Lydia Davis
1:40 Alaa Al-Aswany
1:57 Herbjørg Wassmo
2:15 Richard Ford
3:05 Lars Norén
3:59 Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o
5:14 Umberto Eco
5:32 Patti Smith
6:06 Sjón
8:52 Kjell Askildsen
Excellent comment. That's a model to strive for well done
I'm almost 10 and I love writing books I'm going to be a author when I grow up and I'm gonna ignore haters :)
Good luck
Hope you'll succeed Mr. Potato Dab Police
Keep dabbing and don't get too mashed!
Hopefully you won't ignore constructive criticism though
I wish you good luck and successes!!! Wish me too I also love to write
Patience really is the foundation of writing. It took me 30 years to convince myself I really could and should write. It took me an additional five years to publish something. If I didn't have a massive amount of patience, I would not be a writer.
chapachuu
Now THAT is inspiring. Thanks for sharing.
Which book have you written? I wanna read
Your story too is an inspiration.. I'm on my way to become like you.
@@hrangaolourosii8697 me 3
"It is not about desire. It is about necessity." That hit me hard, honestly.
That is actually a pretty bad piece of advice.
@@Pyro-Moloch Yeah..I agree
@Leena Elbouatmani a shock how? What do you mean?
@@Pyro-Moloch haven't stopped writing since i was 14, if i did my mind would crumble under itself. Writing isn't always something that you decide to do one day,for some it's to let go of a certain capacity, with the only goal is to escape.
@@TobiasRo I understand that, but people are different. I like to think of myself as a writer, and if I was to abandon it, I might as well kill myself. I mean it is as important for me as it is for you. But hell, if I didn't *force* myself to get off my ass and work, I'd probably not write anything. And that doesn't make me less of a writer than anybody. Why I called this piece of advice bad is because it's gatekeeping. It may make somebody feel like, if ideas don't literally stream out of them, that makes them not a writer - and that's just not true. We're all different, there's no *right* way to feel.
I love the guy who says that we shouldnt be ashamed of our trash influences, if we loved it then its good
same to u
So mature
Sure thrash lover, be proud of your garbage diving. Maybe you'll find something normal people would call edible in your thrash heap one day!
*6:20** "Do not be afraid of working with things that fascinated us when we were the most impressionable."* I think that's some of the best I've heard. Stuff that first got us by our imagination or our passion as kids as so important even in adulthood, even if we haven't thought about it in years. It always remind us of that feeling of discovering a new world and realising all the possibilities of storytelling or creating and its what keeps that wonder inside for us to be able to hopefully try and give another child or person that same gateway.
Yeah
True
th-cam.com/video/Yzv8I0tzyA8/w-d-xo.html
"I would say not to take advice, write based on you are and what you've learned"
This piece of advice struck a cord with me. I liked that there were many different viewpoints on the subject. Writing is messy. There isn’t a clear cut answer. It just goes to show that you should follow the advice you think is best.
So true. It is stunning to me how much advice writers give which is actually just discouragement to young people.
Excellent! Brilliant minds reaching out. I love how two of them almost appear to talk us out of it. But what they're really saying is "If you're not passionate enough about it, don't bother." That feels like a healthy down to earth approach. It's not for everyone. Only get into it if you're ready to work for it.
I figured there would be at least one with that approach. Give you an idea, if you want something then work towards it. Let none hold you back.
People will get you nowhere, you build who you are. No title creates you. You are given it for pursuing what you desire. And in the end, whether you achieve it or not. It is something you tried for, and that simply is something to be greatly admired.
No story can hold me back
I’m 15 and I found out that writing is my passion and I LOVE it so I came here looking for advice .. and yeah I am a beginner but I hope I can be like them one day❤️❤️
You got this!
You will my friend :)
Do good, dude
Hi. I'm 15 too. I have the same interests as you and really want to become an author one day. I decided to go on and reply to your comment because I wanted to talk about our dreams. Honestly, I think as long as we are determined and strive to be the best and just work hard, we'll be able to succeed. I'm someone that really worries about my future and I spend hours staring at my ceiling wondering if it's all going to be worth it. Maybe you can relate to this. So yeah, just keep your goal at the front of your mind and just keep working to improve no matter how long it takes. Patience is very important. We've got this! ❤❤
@@rachaelnorris8047 Me too! All we’ve got to do is work hard, try our best and we’ll get there. 😊
Don’t make your writing success dependent on wether it is published and sold a lot or on the critiques. Make it dependent on wether you are happy with it. Does it capture the truth you wanted to tell? Of course it is great when publishers and readers also enjoy your book but this success is dependent on so much more than just your writing skill.
I Don't think so
my advice is just write enjoy the thought process, put it on paper, don't think it too much, if you did bad writing you will learn from it, it's a stepping stone not the end of the world.
You got this
"Don't take any advice" was the best advice from this video :D.
I also really liked the "It's not a desire, it's a necessity" one.
I started writing four years ago (when I was aged nine) and I have been working on my passion project for a large majority of that. It has been a wild ride with over three drafts and incredible amounts of hard work. Social life is immediately shut out for me. Writing takes the cake and I will continue hacking at my drafts until I can snag a literary agent!
“If you want to be a writer, write!” Epictetus
8:52 this is the best one
What language might that be?
The most valuable advice IMHO is the one given by Ms Wassmo at 2:01 which is to not give up even if you have days and weeks where you loose faith in your abilities...
Jonathan Franzen's advice works best for me: "have fun, try to create something that is fun to work on."
This has to be my Most Loved piece on the vocation of writing.
This set of interviews has worked a miracle in my life in a matter of 11 minutes and 22 seconds.
A private miracle significant only to me, and one I'm experiencing alone, as no one who knows me takes my need to write seriously.
No one I know supports my love of writing, nor do they care what it means to me.
It's always other writers, you know?
This set of writers touched my heart, and comforted my soul. Their words stirred my will to write again. Just like that.
I found myself forgetting to breath for moments at a time...as though the slightest sound, even the steady whispering of breathing, would keep me from hearing their words, from being edified by the interviewees' wisdom.
I was spellbound. And enraptured by the gravity of their countenances.
Did anyone else totally love the advice spoken in other languages? It was the advice of those writers I found to be the most heartfelt, sincere. The most profound.
This genius set of interviews managed to renew my love of writing, to feed my anemic confidence, to cut through the suffocating doubt I've breathed for three years.
The messages of the interviewees stirred my blood into a roiling boil of urgency, and stoked the smoking embers of my love for writing into snapping, crackling flames.
While the darkness has been parted, the flames have been stoked, and the desire is urgent, I need to write. Like NOW. :)
Thanks for the creatively edited video! I'll never forget it.
And sorry for leaving a post filled with purple-prose and sentimental drivel.
Some of this advice I think is great, and some of it I think is potentially either beneficial or dangerous, depending on your actual goals. A good chunk of the advice seems to fall into one of two categories: "You've just gotta believe in yourself and it will come to you!" or "Don't do it unless you're willing to spend every second writing, and then you'll probably still fail."
I think everyone should ask themselves exactly what they're wanting to get out of writing. Are you wanting to quit your job and become a famous author? Are you doing it on the side because you enjoy it?
If you truly want nothing else in the world than to write, as a profession, to the point that you're going to quit your job and gamble everything...then sentimental dream-seeking advice is something to be weary of. While I don't think you should ever begin something so ambitious feeling discouraged and deflated, the advice about perseverance and reality-checking is, I think, more valuable in this case.
However, if writing is something you're interested in as a hobby, then I think the "Give all or give up" mentality is TERRIBLE. Nobody should be shut down from exploring a new hobby because they're not especially talented or willing to drop the rest of their life for it. That said, I do think that particular advice was likely aimed at people pursuing the dream of being on Ellen bragging about their new best seller.
Think this relates to music. You know, you're probably not going to be the next American Idol or famous rock band, but there's nothing stopping you from singing in the shower, or gathering up a group of friends to jam with, and maybe even play at a small house party, or make something of value, even if it's only valuable to 25 people.
You can still create and share something that leaves you with a sense of fulfillment. You don't have to find a mass audience to do that.
Well, its simple. You like reading books, you eventually will try to write them too. Its fun? I don't think so, atleast not all of it. Its a mess if you ask me, each one of us have awasome story in our head but to actually bring them on paper is lot of work, guess that what differentiates reader from writers. Like
Out of 10, 8 think they can write, 6 of them will try, 3 of them eventually get stuck after 3 or 4 chapter ( they will kill there story because of self-criticism, comparison, inconsistency, impatience etc etc) remained 3 will keep daydreaming , staring at blank page. Out of remaining, well I believe 1or 2 will actually able to complete the rough novel. Moral of the fact is just keep writing but don't fuck your life over it, if you don't get any success.
Note: Pretty sure I am of those three people who have write 3 or 4 chapters then gave up! So many incomplete stories 🤔😐
Are you residing in my head. You cherry picked my mind.
Sandeep keep going. Keep writing
Sandeep this post should get a reward for complete honesty 🙏🏾
Just keep going mate!
This is true. I managed to finish my drafts, but it was difficult and a lot of work. My friends who tried fell behind and I was the only one who gathered success. Writing comes with hard work, that’s simple.
Write and write again - until the lambs become lions.
1415Razor Love this
That's deep.
So smart, I can’t believe l’am getting all this, from the source.
THE BEST COLLECTION OF ADVICE- STANDING IN BETWEEN, THE DARK BITTER TRUTH AND THE LIGHT AT THE END OF A LONG TUNNEL//
Richard Ford thinks the "tough love" approach is what people need. It rarely is.
I always bounce in and out of becoming a writer but in all my drean paths creative writing is always present
What I learned here, is that the best advice is your own advice.everyone has contradictory advice from each other; and so selecting the right advice is up to your own judgement, regardless of what the pessimistic or optimistic writer says. Only you can think for your self.
I agree
For anyone who doesn’t think hard work trumps talent, look up Larry Brown. He was a high school drop out who wrote five unpublished novels and hundreds of short stories before he got published.
That first bit of advice is so important. Having fun while writing is the reason why we all started in the first place and should be the reason why we all do it.
The Patti Smith advice at 5:32 is what resonated with me the most. That was very good advice.
write write write till you get it right
sounds great
i'll watch this again and again like a j.cole video
This whole video is gold it's like a mantra for me I have almost every word memorized
I've probably watched it a thousand times
Hum...he said You shouldn't write if you're not talented? Then how do you get talented?
There is a difference between talent and skill. Talent is natural. Skill is developed by hours of beating on your craft.
Sacha wilder I think it was an foreign language interpretation problem. Maybe he meant a "great desire, or need to write" by talent. That's what it sounded like to me as I was listening.
I think maybe he meant more a long the lines of inspiration? The drive and passion to.
practice! you just have to start somewhere and see what your comfortable with, and build from there...
Your born with a writing talent, if you've been writing since you were 5/6 years old then you must have a talent for it
I love how this is in so many different languages rather than just English speakers.
This was very interesting to watch. It really feels like some of them describe being a writer as a personality and not a job.
6:06 to 6:56 100% - Returning to our roots of inspiration, in combination with trying out a totally fresh medium, is what I am going to commit to in order to hopefully exorcise the disillusionment art school has left me with.
7:47 to 8:50 ; 10:08 to 10:49 !
There were great pieces of advice throughout the montage, but Sjón really hit the nail on the head of what mattered most for me to hear.
8:54 probably the best and most wise advice of them all.
"Write, write, write and write again and you will get it right"
It's funny to hear how advice can be so contradictory. In the end it's our very self who decides what's best. Listen closely to your heart and keep your lightness towards yourself and others. Writing is a great communication tool and if you won't succeed as a writer, at least you'll be equipped with this powerful tool.
In my opinion)the best advice ever for young writers)
8:51
I find that when I'm happy my book becomes happy and when I'm sad my book becomes so. My goal is to one day get a book published I'm working on one right now. I really pour my heart and my soul into my story's
Those are advices for life, for every one. They're amazing
Wish i had this people as my friends i really enjoy listening to this helpful advices ✨
write, write, write again and you will get it right........Ngugi Wa Thiong'o @ 4:16
Most of these are much like what DFW said when he talked about Lynch, how a great artist is truly sincere and just doesn't give a damn. He doesn't think what makes a good artist, he is an artist. "Stop talking about what a good man is, be one" -Marcus Aurelius.
I am working on my First book. I admire Ngugi wa Thiong'o so much.
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This makes me feel less of my writing. I don't know how, I just feel bad at writing now like there's no hope for me.
Eva Helene Hagavik me too.
But let’s keep writing anyway. Take away the goal of publishing
Don't listen. Best advice is to get into something you wanna soak your teeth in. And fuck people who give 'advice' to scare people away who are just starting out. A waste of your time.
If they would regretted they would just say it directly, but if is an advise for others that may regret it in the future, I feel that they are just scare of the new generation being better 😅
Oh please, What did you write today?
I'm getting older now, but still hearing these testimonials are inspiring.
I think we need to demystify writing as if it’s passed down from the heavens through muses or that it’s for the obsessive manic who must write to get the madness out of their soul. It’s work. Have fun. Keep practicing. Get a little better each day and with each piece. My word, “if you’re not talented, don’t write”? How about write until you get talented. Geesh. My first novel sucked and I hope my next book sucks a little bit less
Greetings from Colombia. The Venezuelan Immigrant writer 🌎
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Wow... the third person is a huge depressing let down. "If you aren't talented, give up". That's totally useless advice.
Well if you aren’t at least respectable at writing then you should do something else.
@@volitionant9682 I think no one is "respectable" at writing right away. And if you're having fun with it, then go for it!
But it is true
Yes, you can dedicate your blood, sweat, and tears to writing even if you think you're not talented or have a hard time with your Muse. If you enjoy it, you will bleed for it. And succeed.
so don't be untalented.
If I had to give a young writer any piece of advice it is this...create characters that you love spending time with..when you get to your desk the next day it's exciting to see what they've been up to while you were away..you simply can't wait to get back to them..
I'm currently writing a book and I'm 14. I should be writing my book but I'm watching videos about writing.
View this only to listen to Richard Ford. All the others are delightfully vague, and (unwittingly) confess to the fact they would not know the first thing about how to actually go about the process of creative writing. And another thing - nearly all the interviewees are (Ford and Jonathan Franzen being notable exceptions) not quite successful themselves as practitioners of the art. N.B. Do make it a point to listening to Richard Ford's full interview on the Louisiana Channel: 'Art is heavy lifting.'
Thank you so much for this piece.
I enjoyed it. Believe in yourself. Do not to the markets or publishers. Writing is a jealous lover you have to be yourself with it, to enjoy the relationship
I have never met someone who became a good writer after listening to other authors advises!
Pretty much everyone I know doesnt like to Wright and they ask me why I wright and how I can wright like I do. Well here is my answer. Wrighting is my happy place whatever I feel becomes the feel of my story. I display my emotions in my story's. My story's go a lot deeper then the words on the page. I love it and I hope to one day hopefully soon get a book published that is my number one goal in life. I never wanted much in life to be honest, and I find so much joy in wrighting. Too all the other soon to be young authors I hope you accomplish all your wrighting goals!
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The best advice is telling Richard Ford and Alla Al-Aswany to piss off. How dare either one of them to tell anybody not to write.
so interesting, to contrast the remarks of updike with those of ford ~
I think I need to control my obsession of being author. It’s takes time
If you enjoy it and think it helps you internally, that's the catalist.if you succeed then that's great, if not it still benefits you.
Loved this video, excellent smörgåsbord of advice
this inspired me ... thank you
Goddamnit V, go back to Mystic Messenger
Noveneil Volkov 😂😂
You know something I've always noticed is that Lydia Davis has the same manner of speaking as Noam Chomsky...
They reveal themselves with every word.
Writing is easier than you think. Just think and write - try it!
The main point is to believe in yourself and in what you write.
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The very best advice is: stop watching videos on TH-cam looking for advice on writing --- just WRITE!
I've learned in life that sometimes you have to decide that you want to do something then go and do it. Writing is no different than sports or music or pottery or hobby electrical engineering or building - it takes some work but if you love it you'll go a long way. If God has given you a gifting, you'll go far. By gifting I mean it's something which follows you around.
You'll forget about writing for a while, and then someone will come up and say "I really liked that story you wrote last year. Are you still writing?"
Or "I'm looking forward to seeing that book you're going to write."
Pay attention to what you might deem coincidences. Sometimes God uses those to get our attention. Two coinciding event usually happen the same day, at least for me. I'll be thinking about music for a weekend service and someone will say to me, out of the blue "Hey, are you singing anywhere this weekend?" Or something like that.
"A great poet turns mere words into human emotions" live by these words and you'll be the next dickens
So inspired.
In my perception, the best advices (4:00 & 8:50) .
Precious! Thank you. For Portuguese speakers I recommend the series "Super Libris" in youtube, about Brazilian Writers
im only 12 , but i started writing 11 years ago, yeah im a beginner , but im young and will be great, just in case anyone needed to know.
"Avoid the market as much as you can. The market is the most lethal of all poisons." !!
I love the very last quote.
Thanks...very interesting 🌎
it was so useful for me. thank you.
I'm in 12th grade and I'm going to graduate in a month and I have purposely not done work to work on my novel and I absolutely do not care about any of it. Yes I finish the work but I don't it at my own pace I do not stress or force myself to get something finished I'll do it when I do it this is my potential career I'm working on I only get one chance at this
Writing is one of the possible good things about life that belong to everyone. Writers saying you should not write if you feel no huge, all consuming neccesity to, or if you 'have no talent', should just get over their ego. Is my humble opinion.
"If you're not talented. You should not write" Nobody is talented. It takes ambition to gain the talent. Otherwise nobody would ever become worthy enough to write. "Remember, best sellers doesn't mean best book or best author. It just means it sold a lot." - Grant Cardone
i liked sjon's view. but most of these guys just sound like they want to subvert the question
Thx soooo much!!
If showing this in a classroom and don't want any embarrassment, start after :50.
I am a writer and i do have the key for all of You guys.Just one and only advice that no one of You have thought of...hit me up if You need the real advice
Why only for the young writer.. What about aspired writers who are over 40.
Just a warning that some of these are really negative. The negative ones seem to be men with enormous egos (basically: "unless you're as talented as I am, and you think of writing the exact same way as I do, don't do it.") The others are more instructive.
That's good advice!
Thank you!
Kjell knows. Thats a good advice.
Wow great
I don’t know why people in this comment section are not talking about the writers that are focusing on talent and not hard work and I feel this video just tells you many reasons you should quit writing I don’t find it motivating or inspiring and I am only 4 minutes into this video
“If you are not talented, then you should not write”....well that’s all folks thanks!!
Hey don’t give up!
What they are saying is that you have to love to write, you have to give it a great deal of thought, you can’t just immediately know what to write about. Writing doesn’t have to be for everyone, just for who is good at it and love to do it.
@@alyssalawlor4730 I mean, I highly doubt that. Some people just have a gift for it. However, you can be gifted a paint set, but it is essentially useless if you do not use it. So I think he was serious with the talent thing, then expressed the importance of being madly and possessively in love with it. I hate to agree on the idea that: anyone can be a writer, but only great writers are born? But I really do not know.
Some of this is... trash. A lot of those are truly inspiring; however, I'm sorry, but some of them are just saying things that discourage people. If you want to write, do it. Practise, and practise, and sit down on your butt until you actually have something.
You wouldn't stop doing a project at your job, or your homework when its already halfway done. That would be a waste.
Think of your pieces of writing as children. Don't abandon them Support them, and help them, and love and nurture them until they have grown up, are ready to leave you.
Don't be afraid. Be proud.
And watch Alice Rice's videos on TH-cam because they are not only helpful, but also so interesting and supportive.
Do it. Just write. And finish it. And then hand it in to a publisher if you want to. Be bold. You probably only have this life, and you do not want to regret having not fulfilled your dreams.
No channel name is Alice Rice
Gracias por los subtítulos
"Writing must be the most important thing in your life" if that's how it is you wont live. It's all about balance baby.
Franzen was spot on.....:-)
Richard has no idea how he ended up here
I started my literary journey just the previous year and I've been at it ever since - just wrote over two novellas, one novel and nine short stories...
... And I owe it all to Plastic Love.
Talent Storytelling comes from the bottom of your heart. Not your mind. Young writers make that mistake when they write whats on their own minds, No! You have to have a deep passion in own your heart. To become famous writer, Like James Patterson for example.
He writes from the bottom of his heart. Storytelling is a gift.
But don't believe what Richard says. He's a put down.
1976 Dark Vator I’ll take Richard than James P
Writers are so dramatic lol. Richard Ford belongs in r/gatekeepers
my advice is to have respect for your own work, do not go Willy nilly with your stories or characters in anyway you want, experiment a little but don't take to where it's a way to "take the piss"