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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Rhett Butler, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Literary Halloween Costume Ideas

As Halloween nears, it’s time for our annual feature on literary costume ideas. The blogosphere was bursting with ideas last year, but we’d love to hear more suggestions–especially literary costumes for this GalleyCat editor’s one-year-old baby…

Share all your ideas at the #literarycostumes hastag created by Random House

Adventurous Writer pointed us toward a brilliant Curious George Man in the Yellow Hat costume (pictured, via).

The Book Bench set up a Flickr page collecting the best photos of literary Halloween costumes.

 

continued…

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

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2. Drunk Scribbles Vs. Scheduled Writing

Tonight, Somewhere in New York: The Last Stories and an Unfinished NovelWhat's the best way to finish your book? Drunk in a roach motel or handcuffed to a day-planner?

Over at Urban Muse, writing guru Kelly L. Stone advises writers to apply fanatical care to the business of writing; planning their schedules with an iron spreadsheet.

After interviewing over one hundred writers, she concluded these techniques work the best: "setting a writing schedule, adhering to that writing schedule under all circumstances barring illness and true emergencies, creating deadlines for getting the various stages of their projects completed, using some type of “quota” system to ensure that they complete their work consistently."

On the other end of the writing scale, Slate's Jack Shafer blasts all writers who adhere to such rigid codes. His essay touches the messy corners of every writer's brain, explaining "Why Booze and Cigarettes Are Essential for Good Journalism": "journalists identify with larger-than-life personalities, because that's how they see themselves. Deny the journalist his self-image as a rule-bending individualist and you might as well replace him with a typist."

I'm an ex-smoker who can drink Scotch like a hardboiled hero, but without an inner typist I'd never get through my next draft. Still, whenever my inner typist wrestles my inner hardboiled hero, the hero usually wins. That's why I'm still plowing through the billionth draft of my novel.

Who do you believe, the hardboiled hero or the boring typist? Are you stumbling madly through your book or are you following a time-clock? 

 

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