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Ill look into it. I want to write a non fiction book about overcoming life's obstacles, particularly fear.Obviously no idea what you want to write and haven't been in your position but, even as a non-writer, I find this super interesting.
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2020 Creative Writing Lectures at BYU
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Ill look into it. I want to write a non fiction book about overcoming life's obstacles, particularly fear.
It's a grind. Filled with self discipline, self doubt, uncertainty, hard choices, scary moments... I've known a lot of people who've said they're going to write a book and haven't gotten very far with it.
I think non-fiction will be a little more forgiving. First thing's first, create an outline with as much detail as possible. But make it complete. With a good detailed outline in place, the framework is there.
Oh, non-fiction is completely unforgiving due to the necessity of sources and the intensity of the writing.
I took some lessoned learned and shortcut some writing time by preparing three different outlines:
1. The normal outline.
2. Same outline, but with a topic sentence for each paragraph. That gives you a head start before writer's block hits.
3. Normal outline, but with the sources laid out for organized citations.
That said, it still took two years just at writing time, and 4 more ahead of that time to get it rolling.
I get that, but it's not like there's no "intensity" of writing with fiction. With non-fiction, you don't have to worry about character development, which seriously can take months. The simple fact that non-fiction is all sourced and based in factual information makes it easier to feel grounded. Fiction is much scarier because there literally are no boundaries. It sounds like it'll be a much easier and free writing experience, but no, it's f*cking terrifying.
Actually, you totally have to worry about character development along with factual accuracy and potential real-life implications, depending on your topic, field of study, and whatever.
Right, but with fiction, you're creating and building characters out of nothing. From scratch. You don't do that with non-fiction.
Kind of true, but not really. You just want fiction to be more difficult.
Some of the characters in non-fiction are totally unknown to people, so you have to build them up, but economically, because you can't drag stuff out forever. Still, for the reader, you're building them from scratch, and trying to do it from whatever disparate evidence there is. In fiction, you control all the source material as you create it.
Never thought I'd take advice from a HawkeyeYeah, and that doesn't make it easier. I've done both, neither is easy, but non-fiction isn't as hard because you have a factual baseline that already exists.
Alright, so I've told myself for a long time I really want to write a book. Anyone on here ever done it? Do you have any secrets or tricks that help make the process easier?
TIA
Step 1 move to MaineI have not, but have always wanted to. A great book to read on the subject is "On Writing" by Stephen King. Not only helpful, but an interesting read too.
Never thought I'd take advice from a Hawkeye![]()
Greetings.Alright, so I've told myself for a long time I really want to write a book. Anyone on here ever done it? Do you have any secrets or tricks that help make the process easier?
TIA
Alright, so I've told myself for a long time I really want to write a book. Anyone on here ever done it? Do you have any secrets or tricks that help make the process easier?