One of the best things I could leave is a roadmap to better writing. To that end, here are 21 tips from Robert Bausch, author of The Lives of Riley Chance, A Hole in the Earth and The Gypsy Man.
- Be passionate.
- If you can make it work, there aren't any rules.
- Write daily.
- Don't complain about not having time to write. Complain about something else.
- Never surrender.
- Last changes — look at the end [of your piece] to tighten all the words.
- Write with your experience, not from it.
- Even if you're writing nonfiction, tell a story; don't report the facts.
- Use different voices for different points of view.
- Inhabit all your characters, especially for point of view.
- Don't have character convey what it's your job as the author to communicate.
- The narrator tells, and characters show; know the difference and when to do which.
- Get ideas from other books; look for the inspiration, what inspires you. What touches you in a way that nothing else does?
- Have a deep emotional attachment to what you're writing.
- About endings — if you're surprised by what's happening, the reader will be, too.
- Around the middle, a book will take its own direction, and you have to go along for the ride. If it takes you in a different direction, and it doesn't work, then you go back to where it diverges and rework, but let it go.
- Cultivate the capacity to let go when a work wants to be something other than what you thought it would be.
- Find out what your own rules are, and follow those.
- An author is usually not the narrator, or any of the characters.
- You don’t have to like or approve of a character to identify with him or her. You only have to be engaged in what happens to the character.
- An author does not put things in a story or poem to stump the reader. What we find in stories and poems—the metaphors or symbols, or themes—come from a waking dream, the author’s unconscious mind at work.