When I met author Alice McDermott for the first time, it was at a craft lecture she was presenting at The Writers’ Center in Bethesda, Maryland. The topic of the craft lecture was, “When Your Novel-in-Progress Doesn’t.”
Most authors who have written a novel — or tried to — can relate to that.
Alice McDermott, despite her two Pulitzer Prize nominations, her National Book Award win, and her regular trips onto the New York Times Bestseller list, is no exception.
“I was in middle-book syndrome,” she explained. She was halfway through a novel, she knew where it was headed, but she didn’t want to finish it.
“The best practice is to write through your reluctance to continue — even if you begin writing a different story, keep writing.”
That’s what Alice did. She shelved the project she was no longer interested in and focused on another.
So if you’ve lost interest in what you’re writing, perhaps it’s time to move on to something new. If your novel-in-progress is not progressing, move on.
Learn more about Alice McDermott’s words of writing wisdom at the following links.
http://writeful.blogspot.com/2007/07/writing-to-convey-pain-and-sweetness-of.html
http://writeful.blogspot.com/2005/11/mcdermott-on-flow-of-words.html
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