Twitter and Reading Widely

One of the bits of writer advice that I hear often is read. Read a lot and read widely, especially out of your genre. Not only will this help educate you about the world, but it will also educate you about various ways of conveying information. And perhaps most important to a writer, a collection of odd bits of information will serve as tinder, just waiting for the right spark of creativity. I think this is one of the biggest reasons writers should be on Twitter (and you can find me tweeting at @erchristensen).

Forget creating a platform or learning about economy of communication (For now, that is. These are important skills, but they are beyond the scope of this post). Instead, realize that all day long, you get a constantly updating stream of links to articles, commentary, and essays from a variety of viewpoints.

Of course, because it is a constantly chattering distraction, Twitter can also be a huge time suck. Many a writer close down Twitter while they are working. You just need to know how to control your impulses. But that’s true for Twitter and just about everything else.

Anyway, I recently came acros this Vanity Fair article about the French Foreign Legion for example. Not only is it an interesting piece, but to a fantasy writer like me, it’s fodder for all sorts of future stories. Think about it–a collection of outlaws and outcasts, living under assumed names, coming to the only place that will have them. Yet this place is incredibly hard to survive in, let alone thrive. And a good number of the members of the group will be hurt and killed. And yet new recruits show up all the time. Can you see how with just a few tweaks, the story ideas blossom faster than I can write them down?

The thing is, I don’t subscribe to Vanity Fair, and I don’t usually pick it up in the airport or newsstand. Nothing against the magazine, it’s just not my go-to periodical. But I would not have read it without Twitter. See? Twitter’s not all bad. Nothing to be afraid of. So go ahead and join. Follow many, read widely, and write better.

What’s your take on Twitter? A valuable tool for a writer? Or does the distraction outweigh it’s use? Or do you only view it as a platform, as a way to communicate with fans and other writers?

Submit to redditDigg ThisSubmit to StumbleUpon
Share via email

What Science Fiction and Fantasy Should I Read?

I’m always reading. I love it, and I can’t get enough of it. I think this blog has made that pretty obvious that I love science fiction and fantasy. But I feel like I’ve been playing catch up with my reading lately. For example, I just finished Reamde by Neal Stephenson. Finally, I know. But in my defense, that 1,000 page tome was interrupted by a re-read of books 1-4 of A Song of Ice and Fire and my first read of A Dance With Dragons.

I recently bought Ready Player One by Ernest Cline, the Mistborn trilogy boxed set by Brandon Sanderson, The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss, and The Legend of Eli Monpress by Rachel Aaron. And I still have Snuff by Terry Pratchett on my bookshelf.

I’m very happy with my “to read” book list. These should all be great science fiction and fantasy, but I also realize that they are at least a year old, and some are a few years old. So I’m putting the call out: what is the latest and greatest book that I should read? What science fiction and fantasy book are you most looking forward to in the later half of 2012? What about in 2013? Okay, okay, if you want to include some classic science fiction and fantasy, I won’t get upset. What are some of your favorites that go overlooked by critics?

Post your suggestions in the comments below. I look forward to reading them. Yes, that pun was intentional.

Submit to redditDigg ThisSubmit to StumbleUpon
Share via email

Tomorrow is Take Your Child to a Bookstore Day

Just a quick post to remind everyone out there what tomorrow is: Take your Child to a Bookstore Day. But Eric, I don’t have any kids, you say. Well, do you have a niece or nephew or young cousin? Take them. Get some holiday shopping done. Teach them about how wonderful books can be, fire their imaginations, and get them reading.

Have a great weekend, everyone!

Submit to redditDigg ThisSubmit to StumbleUpon
Share via email

My Latest Problem: Reading, but not Writing

Writers are repeatedly told that reading is just as important as writing. Reading good and bad works, reading long and short pieces, and reading outside your comfort level are all supposed to help, so long as you read actively, learning from what you read. I love hearing this advice, because I have been a voracious reader since a very early age. Even today, I am rarely without a book or magazine. I’ll leave clothes at home so I can pack books for a vacation. I’ll read while I brush my teeth. But lately I have found that reading has got in the way of my writing. Reading has become my new go-to procrastination habit.

I’m lucky enough to be able to read while on the subway. When I get home, I drop my bags, and put my book on a side table. When I’m ready to get to work, there’s my book calling to me. And it’s so easy to rationalize picking up that book: What happens next? Wasn’t I almost finished with that chapter? Don’t I need to return it to the library soon? Before I know it, it’s time to go to bed.

The rationalizations can be particularly compelling when I think about picking up a book on how to write. Surely my latest short story could benefit from a plotting or characterization review, right?

And so my word count starts to drop, and drop, and drop. If you subscribe to the theory that to become an expert at something, you must spend 10,000 hours practicing and performing the underlying acts, every time I choose reading over writing, I push that expert status further and further away. This is part of the reason why I started this website. If nothing else, it gets me writing every day, flexing those creativity muscles. I just need to be strong enough to choose writing over reading more often. After all, if I’m not writing, what business do I have calling myself a writer?

What about you? How do you procrastinate when you should be writing? How do you get back to writing?

Submit to redditDigg ThisSubmit to StumbleUpon
Share via email