In his book, On Writing, Stephen King’s often quoted
advice tells writers to “write with the door closed and rewrite with the door
open.”
Photo by Anna Delores |
We write with the door closed to the chatter of others’ ideas and perspectives. In the first-person travel essay, for example, the writer needs solitude to properly re-experience the subject of the writing. We need to take our minds back to the thwack of the soccer ball in a small Roman neighborhood, the languorous stroll of daily life in a South Pacific village, the vapors, odors, and garlicky aromas of Manhattan.
Then, when the writing is drafted—the stuff in our minds dumped onto the page—we (and each of us in our own way)—re-read and revise. But, before we alter the initial effort too much, it’s time to share with people we trust.
Most of us need first readers who can comment objectively on the writing—tell us the parts that provoke, that resonate, that sing. We need these readers as well, to point out the muddle or confusion, the parts that need clarity or deleting. Most emerging writers need someone to point out what to keep, what to dump and what to develop.
Then the writer returns to the work room, closes the door and revises—that most pleasurable of activities when we can focus on the clarity of experience and the meaning to be made of it.
2 comments:
I believe there is universal truth in the need for outside review of art in the making. My medium is wood. I crave critical input both in the drawing and making of my pieces. I am reminded of a time in my past when I was in denial of this truth to the detriment of my progress. This does need saying. Thanks.
It is so true that other people's input/perspective can help us figure out our own--and can be so stimulating! Thanks for the thoughtful comment.
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