James A. Michener said:
Posted: Mon Feb 10, 2025 5:30 am
Anyone who thinks differently is arrogant.
If the great writers of our time need several attempts, then you certainly do too.
"I'm not a very good writer. But I'm a very good rewriter."
Don't give up if the first draft is bad.
There is no shame in this.
It is a shame when
1. you publish the bad draft.
2. you do not publish the draft and abandon it.
But if you want to become a master of your craft, then edit, revise and refine until your text shines like a polished patent leather shoe.
21. Have an opinion. And give it to your hero.
Tony Stark is an arrogant peacock – but still popular with the audience.
The BBC's Sherlock Holmes is azerbaijan telegram screening a sociopath - but people love him.
Maximus in the film "Gladiator" has a fixed value system and does not deviate from it. The audience admires him for this.
I know.
The temptation is great to make your hero "perfect".
That he has an answer for everything. Always follows logic. And adapts.
But that is poison for your story.
It becomes as boring as a press release.
Even when you tell your company story, you should include the founder’s opinion.
Your business – and you yourself – must have your own strong opinions.
Otherwise you will get lost in the same old thing like a concrete block.
If the great writers of our time need several attempts, then you certainly do too.
"I'm not a very good writer. But I'm a very good rewriter."
Don't give up if the first draft is bad.
There is no shame in this.
It is a shame when
1. you publish the bad draft.
2. you do not publish the draft and abandon it.
But if you want to become a master of your craft, then edit, revise and refine until your text shines like a polished patent leather shoe.
21. Have an opinion. And give it to your hero.
Tony Stark is an arrogant peacock – but still popular with the audience.
The BBC's Sherlock Holmes is azerbaijan telegram screening a sociopath - but people love him.
Maximus in the film "Gladiator" has a fixed value system and does not deviate from it. The audience admires him for this.
I know.
The temptation is great to make your hero "perfect".
That he has an answer for everything. Always follows logic. And adapts.
But that is poison for your story.
It becomes as boring as a press release.
Even when you tell your company story, you should include the founder’s opinion.
Your business – and you yourself – must have your own strong opinions.
Otherwise you will get lost in the same old thing like a concrete block.