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David Farland's Daily Kick--What Do You Think You Are? PDF Print E-mail
Written by David Farland   
Monday, 08 March 2010 16:18
David Farland’s Daily Kick in the PantsDefining Yourself as a Writer

I sat down to write this morning, and just didn’t feel up to. I woke up with a backache at 3:30 a.m. (due to a recent accident), and couldn’t return to sleep.

I’m sure that many of you have those days. How do you handle them?

Me, I sit down in my chair, and I just say to myself, "Dave, you’re a writer. So write." Then I open the latest work file and start typing. It’s usually that easy. I don’t need Hemingway’s shot of liquor or Coleridge’s two grains of opium to get me going. I just find a quiet place, sit at the laptop, and ponder the job at hand.

I became a "writer" at the age of sixteen, when I first began typing on a manuscript in secret. I didn’t need to be published. I was writing for the joy of it, without much hope that anything I wrote would ever qualify for publication. Many of you are in the same situation. As far as I’m concerned, if you’re writing, you’re a writer. Most professionals will treat you that way, much to the delight of those who are new to the field.

I’ve known people who don’t believe that they’re writers. They think of themselves as "hoping to be a writer someday." What they really mean is that they hope to be published someday.

But those people will find that even after they get published, they won’t feel like they are real writers. Too often, they will go to their first book signing or their first convention and worry that some nameless authority will seek to unmask them, perhaps a renowned critic in a black cape who points an accusing finger and sneers, "You’re not really a writer: you’re just a pretentious housewife!"

All new authors have that fear.

The truth is that we become writers by degrees. When you begin writing, you’re a writer.

When you get published, you become a "published author."

When you’ve been published three or four times by different editors, in the business you’re called a "proven author." That means that a number of people have recognized your mastery of the craft, and editors at publishing houses don’t have to wonder if you can write publishable fiction: they know that you can.

Eventually, everyone in your neighborhood, and perhaps just about everyone in the world, might think of you first and foremost as an author, to the point where your editors sometimes forget that you have a family and a personal life that you have to nurture, too.

But you don’t get there instantly. First, you start today. First, you sit down at your keyboard and say, "I am a writer. I am a writer. I am a writer. Write." Then you begin to spin your tale. . . .

Ethan Canin
—"Nothing is as important as a likable narrator. Nothing holds a story together better."

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