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7 Habits of
Highly Successful Authors
by Suzanne Harrison
The more I read how the successful authors
do it, the more I realise that, like successful people in
all walks of life, they all do things in common that
contribute enormously to their success. So how can we
learn from successful authors to ensure our own success
in 2008 and beyond?
We can start by adopting what I call "The 7 Habits
of Highly Successful Authors". Adopt these 7 habits
and you just may find that 2008 is the year you break
through your own writing barriers!
1.
Write about something you care about.
Whether you are writing fiction or non fiction, it is
imperative you write about something you care about. The
successful authors have some emotional connection to
their content or story. If you are writing fiction, then
write from a place of emotional familiarity. Your genuine
experience will come through in your writing and your
readers will connect with that. If you are writing a non
fiction piece, choose a topic you are passionate or
enthusiastic about. After all, if you are going to invest
your precious time in what you are writing, you owe it to
yourself to write with passion, feeling and enthusiasm.
2.
Take risks
Don't be afraid to put your head, or your hands, on the
chopping block when you write. In the world of fiction,
you will have no doubt heard about creating characters
that are "larger than life". That doesn't mean
they are giants, it means they go above and beyond and
take risks and make decisions that we would not have the
courage to take in our own lives. After all, it's not
about what we would do when we are tethered by the
restrictions of polite behaviour, it's what we would do
in our wildest imaginations that make our readers sit up
and take notice.
For the non fiction writer, it's time for you to take a
stand. Take a view and stick with it, presenting your
case with conviction and vigour. No one listens to
someone who writes meekly, or with a wishy washy hand.
Stick your neck out, and don't be afraid to get it
chopped off. All the greatest journalists are the ones
who are not afraid to speak their minds. Get into that
habit and you're well on your way to being that next
great journalist.
3.
Plan
This is definitely the most ignored but equally the most
important phase of the writing process. Planning is
essential to the success of any undertaking and writing
is no different. J.K. Rowling spent 5 years planning the
entire Harry Potter series before she put pen to paper on
a single word that appeared in the books. If you are
writing a short story, novel or screenplay, planning the
story before you begin writing is as essential to your
success as ink in your pen or power to your laptop. There
are some writers who claim to just start with an image or
a sentence and then the whole thing just unfolds before
them, but the writers who can do this with any degree of
success are few and far between. Take the time to plan
out your story, at the very least know where your
beginning, middle and end are. The more planning you do,
the more enjoyable the writing process and the less
rewriting and editing you will have to do. The same goes
for non fiction pieces, where it's always advisable to
have an outline in place before you write your article or
book.
4.
Write every day
Joyce Carol Oates said that she would write, even when
her soul felt as thin as a playing card, because somehow
the act of writing would set it aright. There are going
to be times when you just "don't feel like it",
but like any other job or activity that is important to
you, you must still, somehow, sit down every day and
write. It has been said that it is by sitting down every
day to write that one becomes a writer. Stephen King
writes every day, including Christmas Day. Whether you
are working on a book, story, article or nothing, still
sit down and write something every single day. Even if
you only write one page every day, that's 365 pages in a
year and that's a whole book, isn't it? When you are a
writer, you cannot not write, and writing is like
breathing. You have an urge to put things down in print,
so to keep that fresh and alive, you need to turn that
tap on every day. It's more than practice. It's life.
5.
Be prepared to work hard
I read somewhere once that John Grisham worked for 4
hours per day and made $20 million per year. Whether that
is true or not (about the hours worked or the money he
makes) doesn't matter. It is far more common to hear
tales today of the world's most popular commercial
authors working their proverbial butts off to keep up
with deadlines, promotional commitments and the ins and
outs of their everyday lives. Janet Evanovich gets up and
writes every morning at 5am so she can get a full day's
writing in before she has to answer mail, emails and deal
with her other affairs of business, Jodi Picoult has a
wonderful stay-at-home husband who allows her the luxury
of writing through school pick ups and travelling for
long periods to do research for her novels. J.K. Rowling
also said she (misguidedly) thought that life as an
author would be a Jane Austen-type of affair, sitting in
a room overlooking a field and writing in anonymity. Of
course her life is a whirlwind of book launches, movie
premieres, media commitments, school commitments, and of
course she has a family with three children. And while we
all no doubt wish we had her "problems" it is
very obvious that in the early part of the 21st century,
the life of an author, successful or not, is a
hard-working life. We are either working hard to get
noticed, working hard to stay noticed, or working hard to
avoid being noticed. Any way you look at it, if you have
an aversion to hard work, you need to look elsewhere.
Successful authors work hard. Period.
6.
Persistence
It is said that persistence outstrips all other virtues.
I have a card propped up on my desk that says,
"Success seems to be largely a matter of hanging on
after others have let go". Almost every successful
author I have studied has said that their success is due,
at least in some part, to pure persistence and
determination. If your manuscript or article is rejected,
rewrite it and submit it again. Or submit it to someone
else. The first Harry Potter novel was rejected by every
major publishing house before Bloomsbury picked it up for
a song. Even so called "overnight successes"
have a story behind them about how many times they were
rejected, or how many novels or articles they've written
that have no value other than as fire kindling. The
authors that succeed are the ones who don't stop until
they do. It's that simple. Never give up. Winners never
quit, and quitters never win.
7.
Let it go
And finally when you have written your article, book or
screenplay and have submitted it for publication or
approval, let it go. If you've done the best you can with
it, let it go and trust that it will make its way to
where it needs to be. And start something else straight
away. Regardless of whether what you have submitted is
accepted or rejected, you are a writer and a writer
writes. Once you finish one manuscript start immediately
on another. If the one you've sent is picked up, they'll
be happy that you've got something new already, and if
not you're well on your way to finishing your next
manuscript.
So those are the 7 Habits of Highly Successful Authors.
Adopt these habits yourself, and before you know it, you
too will join their ranks!
Suzanne Harrison is the Director and Founder of Writers
Central, an innovative online creative writing school and
community, offering creative writing, short story, novel
and screenplay courses, news, reviews, articles,
professional services, competitions and tips for writers.
She can be found at http://www.writerscentral.com.au Suzanne is also a
popular and inspirational speaker and workshop leader,
renowned for her motivational style and her passion for
story. Suzanne believes that the everyone who can speak
and think can write, and she is committed to helping you
become the very best writer you can possibly be. She
begins her unique process by helping you to hitch your
writing arm to your unconscious mind, then guiding you
through the basics of story structure before taking you
step by step through a process to write award-winning
short stories, then onto the ultimate, planning and
writing a novel or screenplay that sells.
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I
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Think
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