Conventional Advice
that Wouldn't Work for Me
1) Write every day.
This piece of advice is repeated in almost every book on "how to write."
Maybe some people need this sort of discipline, but I would find it
counterproductive. Sometimes I write feverishly every day. Sometimes real
life intervenes. I have a demanding job and a family. If I believed I had
to write every day, even when I absolutely had no time, I'd quickly grow
to hate writing and I'd stop doing it. Mostly, I have more ideas than I
have time to process, so "forcing myself to write" is not a problem. And
during those periods when "real life" heats up and I can't write, I don't
feel any guilt. Why should I? Writing isn't a religious penance or a
health routine. It's something I enjoy.
2. Don't Edit Until
the First Draft is Done.
I edit obsessively as I go along. I
like rewriting things. I can't imagine another way to write and would be
utterly incapable of completing that first draft if I didn't do it this
way.
3. Use Note cards or Notebooks to Organize Ideas
Even the thought of using index cards to organize fiction ideas is almost
enough to make me run screaming into traffic. In my mind, these little
cards will forever be associated with undergraduate term papers. I don't
use notebooks because I hate to write longhand. I do all my writing on
the word processor -- even background notes for novels. Actually, I
prefer to do background for novels as short stories, even lame short
stories with no chance of selling. I see things better that way.
4. Keep a Story Circulating until it Sells.
This is another piece of almost universal advice that I don't follow. I
tend to select my
markets rather carefully. If something is rejected at the market I've
thought most probable for it, I will normally only try it on one or two
other markets before giving up (or in some cases no other markets).
Although there are a lot of magazine markets for speculative short
fiction, there are actually relatively few professional markets for
speculative short fiction of any given type. I guess my economics
training makes me weight the possible benefit (payment for a story) by my
subjective evaluation of the "odds" of being published in that magazine.
If the weighted payoff is less than the postage, I put the story in a
drawer and work on another one.