Writing a Big Project? Take a Break With a Great Writer

Reading the words of a good writer is almost as satisfying as writing something decent myself.

Garrison Keillor's Salon PortraitA recurring favorite is Garrison Keillor. I like his writing style and observational bent, and his most recent Salon.com essay lands squarely on the bullseye. He’s finishing a book project on a deadline, and experiencing all the doubts, questions, and fears that accompany it. (I love the illustrated “author’s picture” they use in the column. I want one.)

It’s not so different from my feelings when a big project goes down the wire to the client. Will they love it? Will they appreciate the creative positioning? The hook? The conversational tone?

Or will I get one of those “we like it, but…” calls of doom?

Of course, Keillor’s work appears with his name under it. There are times I wish commercial copy enjoyed the same tradition, and there are times I’m glad it doesn’t. We’d see less real crap out there, and probably a few more red-faced copywriters too.

In any case, statistics suggest you’ve been sitting at the keyboard too long. Take Keillor’s advice and enjoy a walk:

Writers get obsessed with a project and lock the doors and sit and work at it, like animals in a leg trap trying to chew through the leg, which is not good strategy. My advice is to get out of the house and take a walk, a good first cure for the depression that hits after you’ve been working for a year and it dawns on you that your book is not “Huckleberry Finn” but you must finish it anyway because the publisher’s generous advance has been spent on a new pair of shoes for the baby and she has worn a hole in them already, so you press on — on — on — though it strikes you that the world has a great many books already and does it need yours?

Keep writing, Tom Chandler.

p.s. — If you’re in the mood for more Keillor, read his column about writers, whining, and life. Most excellent.

[tags]writing, writers, garrison keillor[/tags]

4 Comment(s)

  1. Tom - Great advice! I like writing one word an hour. By the end of the day I have a sentence! Now that is progress.

    Just kidding :)

    I can relate to locking myself in a room.

    Mike

    Michael A. Stelzner | May 25, 2007 | Reply

  2. See, I’m tooling along at about twice your productivity.

    I had no idea I was so far above average…

    Tom Chandler | May 25, 2007 | Reply

  3. I love to take walks with my wife and kids. We go on one almost every day, usually mid morning or right before lunch. I highly recommend them, even when you’re under deadline.

    One “secret” I’ve discovered for goosing creativity is to just let loose and have fun. Be child-like. Wrestle with your kids, dangle on the monkey bars at the park, jump on picnic tables, balance on parking blocks at the grocery store, whatever.

    Just forget what all the adults think and be a kid… at least for a little while. :-)

    Ryan Healy | Jun 4, 2007 | Reply

  4. Wally the Wonderdog gets me outside almost every afternoon, and yes, it’s possible I spend a few hours every week fly fishing.

    It’s why I live at the base of 14,162′ Mount Shasta — there’s always at least one great reason to leave the house.

    Thanks, Ryan.

    Tom Chandler | Jun 4, 2007 | Reply

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