Tag Archives: New Year’s Resolutions

My New Year reading resolution? Less guilt for giving up on books | Books | The Guardian

Sat 11 Jan 2020 03.00 EST

Source: My New Year reading resolution? Less guilt for giving up on books | Books | The Guardian

As we enter 2020, and I enter your lives as a regular columnist, here are my reading resolutions for the coming year. First, I have to read more. The political climate feels mighty exclusionary, and reading narratives unlike our own seems the best way to access different perspectives, and to remind ourselves that the society we live in holds so many different stories.

Resolution two: as someone who mostly reads non-fiction for fear of accidentally adopting someone else’s voice, I’m getting back into fiction (fear be gone, Candice, get over yourself), plus poetry and plays. Inua Ellams’s powerful transposing of Chekhov’s Three Sisters from Russia to Nigeria at the National Theatre reminded me that a script offers a unique narrative; movement and tone are still there, but the starkness of description allows us to focus on exactly what’s being said.

My third resolution is to stop reading a book if it doesn’t vibe with me, give it to someone else, and to remember that guilt is a wasted emotion. But before all of that, let’s try and get through winter. Why is summer seen as prime reading time? What else are we going to do in January but lock ourselves away and read? Or listen. I’m listening to Tomi Adeyemi’s Children of Virtue and Vengeance. Bahni Turpin’s voice brings the words to rich and transporting life.

Candice Carty-Williams wrote Queenie and co‑created the Guardian 4th Estate BAME short story prize.

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Writing tip Wednesday: “New Year, new start”

6 Tips for (Really) Finishing Your First Book in 2015

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/carrie-visintainer/6-tips-for-really-finishi_b_6392358.html

by Carrie Visintainer

It’s that time of year for New Year’s Resolutions. Love ’em or hate ’em, they come up in all kinds of conversations. Maybe one of your big goals is to publish a book. (Possibly, this has been a resolution of yours for several years, and you just keep transferring it forward.) So in 2015, why not commit? Make it a priority and knock out that first novel, memoir, or story collection. Here are six tips for making your book happen this year.

1. Choose a writing space: This doesn’t have to be an entire room of your own, but it does help to have a designated area just for you, just for writing.

2. Carve out time: This is a challenge for pretty much everyone, no matter your life circumstances. … But you can control this, and you can start by setting realistic goals. Maybe you shoot for an hour every day, or ten pages, or 1,000 words. Do this for a month, and you’ll be amazed: The pages will begin to add up.

3. Turn off your inner censor: We all want to write things that sound beautiful and intelligent; rivaling literary greats and authors we admire. … Be easy on yourself (which is very hard). Commit to the task of putting words on a page without judgment. There’s plenty of time to go back and revise later.

4. Stop at an energetic place: During each writing session, it might take you a while to get warmed up, but then words will begin to flow. Keep going with this, and then do something key: Stop writing for the day when you’re still feeling energized.

5. Join a writers’ group: Critique groups are useful for several reasons. Accountability and camaraderie are but two reasons. … If you don’t know of any critique groups in your area, try posting an ad in a coffee shop or café and see who replies.

6. Reward yourself: Because the act of writing isn’t particularly glamorous — it might even be the hardest thing you’ve ever done — it’s important to celebrate.

Rest of the article at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/carrie-visintainer/6-tips-for-really-finishi_b_6392358.html

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