(JKR uses Twitter! See below. JSW Twitter @JohnSWren4 )
Q. Do you have tips
for others trying to write?
A: I have to say that I can’t stand lists of ‘must
do’s’, whether in life or in writing. Something rebels in me when I’m told what
I have to do before I’m fifty, or have to buy this season, or have to write if I
want to be a success. Ten Habits All Best-Selling Writers Have In Common. These
Five Tips Will Transform Your Writing! Follow J.K. Rowling’s Golden Rules For
Success!
I haven’t got ten rules that guarantee success, although I promise I’d
share them if I did. The truth is that I found success by stumbling off alone in
a direction most
people thought was a dead end, breaking all the 1990s
shibboleths about children’s books in the process. Male protagonists are
unfashionable. Boarding schools are anathema. No kids book should be longer than
45,000 words. So forget the ‘must do’s’ and concentrate on the ‘you probably
won’t get far withouts’, which are:
Reading
This is especially for younger
writers. You can’t be a good writer without being a devoted reader. Reading is
the best way of analysing what makes a good book. Notice what works and what
doesn’t, what you enjoyed and why. At first you’ll probably imitate your
favourite writers, but that’s a good way to learn. After a while, you’ll find
your own distinctive voice.
Discipline
Moments of pure inspiration are glorious,
but most of a writer’s life is, to adapt the old cliché, about perspiration
rather than inspiration. Sometimes you have to write even when the muse isn’t
cooperating. Resilience and humility These go hand-in-hand, because rejection
and criticism are part of a writer’s life. Informed feedback is useful and
necessary, but some of the greatest writers were rejected multiple times. Being
able to pick yourself up and keep going is invaluable if you’re to survive your
work being publicly assessed. The harshest critic is often inside your own head.
These days I can usually calm that particular critic down by feeding her a
biscuit and giving her a break, although in the early days I sometimes had to
take a week off before she’d take a more kindly view of the work in progress.
Part of the reason there were seven years between having the idea for
Philosopher’s Stone and getting it published, was that I kept putting the
manuscript away for months at a time, convinced it was rubbish.
Courage
Fear of
failure is the saddest reason on earth not to do what you were meant to do. I
finally found the courage to start submitting my first book to agents and
publishers at a time when I felt a conspicuous failure. Only then did I decide
that I was going to try this one thing that I always suspected I could do, and,
if it didn’t work out, well, I’d faced worse and survived. Ultimately, wouldn’t
you rather be the person who actually finished the project you’re dreaming
about, rather than the one who talks about ‘always having wanted to’?
Independence
By this, I mean resisting the pressure to think you have to follow
all the Top Ten Tips religiously, which these days take the form not just of
online lists, but of entire books promising to tell you how to write a
bestseller/what you MUST do to be published/how to make a million dollars from
writing. I often recommend a website called Writer Beware
(https://accrispin.blogspot.com) to new and aspiring writers. It’s a fantastic
resource for anyone who’s trying to decide what might be useful, what’s worth
paying for and what should be avoided at all costs. Unfortunately, there are all
kinds of scams out there that didn’t exist when I started out, especially
online. Ultimately, in writing as in life, your job is to do the best you can,
improving your own inherent limitations where possible, learning as much as you
can and accepting that perfect works of art are only slightly less rare than
perfect human beings. I’ve often taken comfort from Robert Benchley’s words: ‘It
took me fifteen years to discover I had no talent for writing, but I couldn’t
give it up, because by that time I was too famous.’
Q. What do you love most
about the writing life?
A: I can’t answer this without sounding melodramatic.
The truth is that I can’t really separate a ‘writing life’ from ‘life.’ It’s
more of a need than a love. I suppose I must spend most of my conscious life in
fictional worlds, which some people may find sad, as though there must be
something lacking in my external life. There really isn’t! I’m a happy person,
by and large, with a family I adore and quite a few activities I enjoy. It’s
just that I have other worlds in my head that I often slip in and out of and I
don’t really know how it would feel to live any other way.
Q. What does it feel
like having your work scrutinised?
A: Having your work scrutinised is an
inevitable concomitant of being a professional writer. I never dreamed that
there would be a fandom the size of Harry Potter’s picking over the books. It’s
staggering and wonderful. Given that I’m fairly obsessive myself, these are
kindred spirits. I could have spent literally every hour of every day discussing
Potter characters, plot twists and theories with fans over the last ten years,
but as I want to work on new things, I don’t give in to this temptation that
frequently. I miss the days when readings and events were slightly more low key.
I’m not complaining, but when audiences grow big you obviously can’t reach
everyone who wants to ask you a question. Being able to engage with people on
Twitter goes some way to solving this for me. It’s astounding that people are
still so interested in those books, and I doubt I’ll ever stop interacting as
long as there are readers who know the world so well. I’m in a new phase with
the fandom right now, because I’m working within the wizarding world again, on
Fantastic Beasts. Once again, I’m balancing wanting to interact with fans, with
not being able to answer certain questions fully, because we’re only two films
into a five film series. It’s a nice problem to have, though.
(Thank you, JKR! JSW. @JohnSWren4)
(Thank you, JKR! JSW. @JohnSWren4)
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