Annie Dillard and the Writing Life by Alexander Chee | via The Morning News, via ThatWhichMatter
This essay by Alexander Chee is chock full of good bits. Too many to pass on here, and yet… a small sampling:
“Sometimes you write amazing sentences, she wrote to me, and sometimes it’s amazing you can write a sentence. “
“You want vivid writing. How do we get vivid writing? Verbs, first. Precise verbs. All of the action on the page, everything that happens, happens in the verbs. The passive voice needs gerunds to make anything happen. But too many gerunds together on the page makes for tinnitus: Running, sitting, speaking, laughing, inginginginging. No. Don’t do it. The verbs tell a reader whether something happened once or continually, what is in motion, what is at rest. Gerunds are lazy, you don’t have to make a decision and soon, everything is happening at the same time, pell-mell, chaos. Don’t do that. Also, bad verb choices mean adverbs. More often than not, you don’t need them. Did he run quickly or did he sprint? Did he walk slowly or did he stroll or saunter?”
“Talent isn’t enough, she had told us. Writing is work. Anyone can do this, anyone can learn to do this. It’s not rocket science, it’s habits of mind and habits of work. I started with people much more talented than me, she said, and they’re dead or in jail or not writing. The difference between myself and them is that I’m writing.”
And, strange, but the essay almost made me want to take up smoking.
I printed a copy for myself and another for my daughter…