I was having a conversation with one of my writer friends the other evening, both of us commiserating about our pre-Conference stress. The conversation moved on to her most recent accomplishment, finishing her YA novel for an editor who had requested it and the resulting feelings. She mentioned that she thought why it was so difficult for writers to complete their novels was that they were grappling with some kind of personal issues which were playing out through the novel and its characters.
That rang true, and I reflected back on an experience of my own. I was reading one of my recent picture book manuscripts to a dear friend of mine over the phone. She loved it and started to laugh. “What’s so funny?” I asked. “Gee, could it be any more autobiographical?” she answered. This hadn’t occurred to me, perhaps because the MC was an animal or perhaps because I was just too close to it. But then I started laughing, too! She was right!
What’s the one piece of advice we consistently hear from editors/agents? Write from your heart, write what you know. And no matter how clever the disguise, how can we possibly leave ourselves out of the equation? Now it may be more obvious in some MS than others, but in looking at our own writing, there are certainly themes, unresolved issues, challenges, dreams … our heart. If we allow ourselves to write from our truest self, we write from our heart.
And that’s the very best thing we can bring to the table.
Completely agree!!!
The best we can do to this world, is to do from our heart and if it says, write, write from the heart!
Whatever we can offer to anyone, to anythng, is basically a piece of our heart and its like a never ending thng. LIke perhaps, you keep giving our droplets from the ocean to people you meet and you can still keep giving it to many many people.
So, I agree, I try to write from my heart, what I feel, and what I can relate to, and what I basically am, my own self.
Sorry, that came out a bit long.
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