25 Feb 2008 02:22:49 | Nicole Murphy
None of us will be brilliant writers the moment we first pick up
a pen or hit the keyboard. It’s a fact. We’re beginners and
while some will be beginning with better skills and
understandings than others, none of us will be the best writer
we can be.
Improving your writing is one of the great parts of being a
writer. There’s no greater feeling than picking up a story you
wrote a year ago or even six months ago, picking up all the
mistakes you made and realising you don’t do it any more. I bet
you can go up to any well known writer and ask them what they
think of the first thing they published and the response will be
something along the lines of: “I’m glad it was published because
it got me started but quite frankly, I read it now and I
shudder."
It can seem overwhelming, when you consider how good you want to
be and how far you need to go to achieve it. A famous quote is
that you need to write a million words before you can be a good
writer. The follow ideas will help you make steady progress in
your writing and achieve that aim of being the best you can be.
1). Practise, practise, practise. Yes, you’ve heard it all
before. Write every day. Or at least regularly. And it’s true.
Writing is a skill and like all skills, will only improve if you
practise. If you’re only going to write once a month or will
write ferociously for several weeks and then not again for six
months, you can’t expect your writing muscles to develop. Even
if it’s only one hundred words a day (and that will only take
ten minutes or so), write as often and as regularly as you can.
2). Pick one weakness and work on it. Don’t try to improve every
aspect of your writing all at once. The first thing I decided to
work on was Point Of View (POV). I got books, asked questions in
online forums and wrote a lot, focussing my attention simply on
POV. I not only got a handle on POV but found the style of POV
that best suited my writing.
Once you’re feeling confident about that area, pick another one
and focus on it. Sometimes, you might only need a week or two to
get a handle on an idea. Sometimes, it might take you months
before you feel really comfortable with the way your writing
looks and sounds.
The great thing is, even though you are focussing on one
subject, the amount of writing you do will see small
improvements in other areas as well. So you almost kill two
birds with one stone.
3). Experiment with your writing. Each month, set yourself a
challenge to do something different. May it’s to write a story
in first person when you normally use third. Maybe it’s to try
writing your story as a transcription of a tape rather than as
an observer of the story. Maybe it’s to try and write one
hundred words as one sentence.
You will end up with interesting ideas, new areas that you need
to look at and perhaps will discover a skill that you didn’t
know you possessed.
4). Write short shorts. Nothing will test your writing more than
trying to tell an entire story, with good characterisation and
plot, in five hundred words. You learn the value of words, the
importance of right word at the right time. Even if you think
you can’t possibly do it, try it. It gets you thinking about
your writing in a way that writing a novel doesn’t, and you
can’t help but see what your strengths and weaknesses are.
5). Get involved in critiquing other people’s work and having
your own critiqued. It is amazing how you can pick up errors in
other people’s work that you cannot see in your own. You’ll
learn a great deal from the process. And for your own work, a
good idea is to ask for questions about a particular thing. For
example: I’m not sure how clear the description is in this
piece. Can you clearly see what is going on? Get your critiquers
to focus on the skill you are focussing on and then you can
receive their comments without being concerned that they are
attacking you or your baby.
Take you time to improve your writing. Allow yourself to make
mistakes and learn from them. No one’s going to come back at you
in ten years and say “How can she be on the New York Times
Bestsellers List? Look at the crap she wrote in 2003.” Except
maybe you.
About Author :
Nicole R Murphy is a writer and copy editor. She can help you
develop your writing skills by copyediting and critiquing your
work. Try a free trial at www.yourbestwork.com