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Stop your day’s writing when?

StopThere is, rep­utably, an old Hem­ing­way sug­ges­tion: That you should stop your day’s writ­ing right in the mid­dle of some plot excite­ment or cri­sis.  It’s not that you can’t go on.  The point is you can instant­ly go on when you return to your work the next day. Instead of star­ing at your text and ask­ing your­self what­ev­er should hap­pen, you know instant­ly what that next event is, and you insert your­self right in the flow of your narrative.

It is use­ful advice, and I’ve fol­lowed it any num­ber of times. But I would frame it in a slight­ly dif­fer­ent way. When you feel you have been writ­ing well, it is always wise to go back and rewrite what you have done. You will inevitably dis­cov­er that it wasn’t quite that good—there will be gaps, glitch­es and stumbles—and by work­ing on them you can enrich the char­ac­ter, sit­u­a­tion, the sto­ry as a whole. When rewrit­ing that way you are not stretched so tight­ly about mov­ing your plot for­ward, and you can be more leisure­ly in the sub­tler aspects of your story.

The ener­gy of your text often comes from the first draft. The qual­i­ty of your work comes from the many sub­se­quent drafts.

3 thoughts on “Stop your day’s writing when?”

  1. In my favorite teach­ing video (hard to get now) of Roald Dahl he told the chil­dren this Hem­ming­way quote in this way (to the best of my rec­ol­lec­tion, but I saw it at least 20 times), “when it is going good, stop. Bet­ter not to come back to a blank page.” He advo­cat­ed writ­ing in his lit­tle gar­den shed (very unglam­orous, but prac­ti­cal) and then going about life with­out talk­ing about your writ­ing. It was a ter­rif­ic video. I have tried so hard to get a copy but it is not on DVD. And I would guess the com­pa­ny is out of busi­ness and the Dahl foun­da­tion made some­one who put it on Youtube take it down!!!

    Won­der­ful post of yours with extra ideas. Just saw Anne Lam­ott talk about writ­ing and her ideas on how to get your­self to do your work.

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