Category: Quotes

  • Maya Angelou sez . . .

    Maya AngelouMaya Angelou said, “There is no greater agony than bearing an untold story inside you.”

    Okay, friends. . . you heard The Lady . . .  Write!

    From Marlene:  Don’t keep your story bottled up inside you.  Write it out.

    Don’t know what to write about?  Check out the prompts on The Write Spot Blog. Choose one. Set your timer for 15 or 20 minutes and Just Write!  You can also find writing prompts here.

  • There is more treasure in books . . .

    treasure map“There is more treasure in books than in all the pirates’ loot on Treasure Island and best of all, you can enjoy these riches every day of your life.”  — Walt Disney

     

     

  • Writing from the other person’s perspective.

    Breana, Mirror“It’s not easy for us to see the world from another person’s perspective, but as writers, we must do exactly that.”

    Emily Hanlon, “Falling Down the Rabbit Hole”    December 2007 Writer’s Digest Magazine

  • Doo-dee-da-dee-dum-dee . . .

    “Caryl Pagel’s poems float and drift and alight in just the right places.” From “How I Write” in The October 2014 issue of The Writer magazine.

    Caryl says, “I start with a doo-dee-da-de-dee-dum-dee in mind and rhyme it with a bloop-bee-doop-bee, or something like that. A clearing of the throat. A hum.”

    LolaMarlene’s Musings: Sounds like a good way to write just about anything. I love watching words fall into place and enjoy the sounds and rhythm of words . . . this goes for prose as well as poetry.

    How do you feel about words and sounds and rhythm? Tell us, we want to know.

  • “Magic happens in rewriting.”

    “Muse still comes in a rewrite. Magic happens in rewriting. As you chip away, themes appear. Start the story on the day the character’s life changes. Use your first draft to explore characters.” — Jennifer Lynn Alvarez, author of The Pet Washer and Guardian Herd – Starfire

    Jennifer says this about Starfire:

    “It wrote me. I did not come up for air until the first draft was finished. I’d always been warned not to write ‘talking animal’ books — that publishers don’t like them — but as I edited STARFIRE, I realized it was the book I’d always wanted to read as a kid.”

    “In hindsight, I’m grateful STARFIRE is the book that broke through because this book, my fifth, is the book I was born to write. It is the sum of me and my interests—flying horses and underdogs, heroes and bullies, and a special colt watching his herd, wishing he was not an outsider. It’s the story for anyone who’s ever felt left out, or different, or alone, but who believes in their heart they can belong and, perhaps, make a difference. It’s my story, and now—thanks to my agent and HarperCollins—it can be your story too.”

    Note from Marlene: Is there a story you have always wanted to write?   Use any of the prompts on The Write Spot Blog to jumpstart your writing. Just Write!

    Jennifer.2books

  • There’s no point in trying to impress people with cleverness.

    I read this quote in the September 2014 issue of The Writer Magazine. It aligns perfectly with my passion for genuine and authentic writing.

    Molly Antopol“Years ago I read an interview with Paula Fox in which she said that in writing, truth is just as important as story. Reading that interview was the first time I really understood that there’s no point in trying to impress people with my cleverness when I can just try to write honestly about what matters most to me.” — Molly Antopol, The UnAmericans, Stanford University

     

     

  • Publishing is a journey, not a destination. — Jennifer Lynn Alvarez

    Publishing is a journey, not a destination. — Jennifer Lynn Alvarez, author of The Pet Washer and Guardian Herd – Starfire.

    Jennifer was an amazing presenter at Writers Forum in Petaluma, summer of 2014.  If you have an opportunity to hear her speak, or attend her author’s event . . . go for it!  She’s warm, friendly and has a herd of information about publishing . .  .both traditional publishing and self-publishing. She has done both and has stories to tell!  She is welcome back at Writers Forum anytime! She’s a good writer, too!

     

    Jennifer.2books

  • What’s the most important thing you’ve learned about writing?

    Andrew Sean Greer answers this question in the September 2014 issue of The Writer Magazine.

    What’s the most important thing you’ve learned about writing?

    “That you be clever as clever, and people will be impressed, but they will only be impressed for so long. After that, unless you are very real in your writing, and donate some piece of your heart, and are vulnerable, someone else will come along much more clever than you. Better to be ready from the outset. There is no competition for vulnerability. We are all in that together.”

    Note from Marlene:  There’s that vulnerability thing again.  Feeling vulnerable seems to go along with sharing your writing with others. . . that’s what Steve Jobs and I were talking about in the August 14, 2014 post about the most important tool in life about making big choices.  Well, Steve and I didn’t actually have this conversation. . . but we could have, in my writerly imagination!

    Your turn:  What’s the most important thing you’ve learned about writing?

    The Writer Magazine

  • What would you attempt to do if you knew you could not fail?

    What would you attempt to do if you knew you could not fail?  — Robert Schuller

    Note from Marlene: You talk, right? And you think, right? Therefore, you can write. I just know it!

    Hand & PenSet yourself up for writing with paper, pen or pencil, or computer and keyboard. Choose a prompt. Set a timer for 12 minutes. And Just Write!

     

  • It is when you give of yourself that you truly give. Khalil Gibran

    You give but little when you give of your possessions. It is when you give of yourself that you truly give. —Khalil Gibran

    Note from Marlene:  It seems to me this is what writers do . . . we give of ourselves every time we share our writing. We put ourselves out there . . . our emotions, our vulnerability, and our hope that our writing is understood. Kudos, Writers, for being willing to put yourselves out there. . . what would we do without you and your stories?

    Love Letters in the Sand. Gibran