When I worked at Writer’s Digest, we typically published books in three key categories:
- how to write better (craft & technique)
- how to get published
- inspiration / self-help
This last category I always felt wary of; it encompasses your bestsellers and worstsellers. It’s about the stuff that surrounds the actual writing, such as how to balance the demands of authorship with other demands in your life—or how to make sure you write in the first place. It often tackles the psychological battles.
Such territory is incredibly subjective and very personality-driven.
That’s why I like this 30-point list from David James Poissant—How to Balance Writing, Family, Work, and Life: An Unhelpful Guide for the Perplexed—which plays on our desire for this type of advice, but also on the paradoxes that lie within it. For example, a few items:
7. Throw away your television.
16. Okay, don’t throw away your television. You’ll miss it when the tornado’s on the way. But, at least, like, unsubscribe from premium cable.
30. Results vary. Side effects range from obscurity to the Nobel Prize.
Read the full 30-point list over at Glimmer Train.
Also this month at Glimmer Train: Revision as Therapy: I Didn’t Understand My Book Until After I Sold by Matthew Salesses
Jane Friedman has spent nearly 25 years working in the book publishing industry, with a focus on author education and trend reporting. She is the editor of The Hot Sheet, the essential publishing industry newsletter for authors, and was named Publishing Commentator of the Year by Digital Book World in 2023. Her latest book is The Business of Being a Writer (University of Chicago Press), which received a starred review from Library Journal. In addition to serving on grant panels for the National Endowment for the Arts and the Creative Work Fund, she works with organizations such as The Authors Guild to bring transparency to the business of publishing.
[…] Writers may desire advice on how to better balance their writing lives and be productive, but few prescriptives are one size fits all. […]
It’s interesting, Jane, because the very issues that you’re wary of — the psychological issues that surround the actual writing — that’s what intrigues me most. It’s why I named my blog Mudpie Writing since writing is delicious, but messy. David James Poissant was very clever and I won’t throw away my TV. Thanks.