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- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!tamsun.tamu.edu!tamsun.tamu.edu!news
- From: mfc1493@tamsun.tamu.edu (Ratboy)
- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Subject: Re: *** Why is rewriting bad ?
- Date: 24 Jan 1993 21:46:33 -0600
- Organization: Texas A&M University, College Station, TX
- Lines: 54
- Message-ID: <1jvnqpINNa12@tamsun.tamu.edu>
- References: <1jfvbpINNr83@ariel.ucs.unimelb.EDU.AU> <1993Jan21.111903.1@lure.latrobe.edu.au>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: tamsun.tamu.edu
-
- >> Robert Heinlein wrote an editorial listing the steps necessary to
- >> succeed as a writer.
- >>
- >> 1) Write.
- >> 2) Finish what you start.
- >> 3) Put it in the mail to somebody likely to buy it.
- >> 4) Never rewrite except to editorial request. NEVER.
- >> 5) Keep sending the story out until you've run out of markets.
- >> 6) Write something else.
- >>
- >> They all make pretty good sense to me, except number four.
- >> I don't believe he's saying that one should always be satisfied
- >> with one's first draft. What is it exactly that he advises against ?
- >
- >I don't think that Heinlien was advising to only write one adraft;
- >what I think he means in that once you have finished the piece
- >of writing and YOU are happy with it (and let's face some writers
- >need more rewrites than other :), then you shouldn't rewrite it
- >unless it has been accepted, and the editor wants a few minor
- >changes.
- >
-
- Agreed. :)
-
- My girlfriend thinks that I rewrite too much...kill the story...but she
- always admits (eventually) that the story comes out better after a few touches.
- I can't obviously speak for Heinlien, but as for myself, when I am happy
- with a story...it is finished. A few years later I may look back and say
- "hey, I should have changed that part" or "I could have said that better"...and
- I may go back and change it, but not likely after too long. When it's
- finished, it's finished. Move on.
-
- I have a problem with the entire "Rules for Writers" concept.
- As I see it everyone writes differently, everyone comes from different
- backgrounds with different experiences. There is no set Bible of "This is how
- you write." Find what works for you. Granted, tips from writers, particularly
- in the publication aspect, may proved beneficial, but the actual creative
- process is yours. Find what works for you. If you don't feel the need to
- rewrite (before editorial request) then by all means don't rewrite. I, on the
- other hand, must labor over a text.
-
- Yea, I ramble. Sorry.
-
- Michael
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