Post by account_disabled on Dec 28, 2023 3:44:25 GMT -5
Numbers and truth. In this article I alternate them, starting with numbers, continuing with truths, finally numbers and truths again to conclude. It was a coincidence that I found them, they were quotes taken from 3 recently read books, a novel and two essays. These are obvious aspects of publishing , even if perhaps only the first is specific to modern publishing, but we are modern authors and therefore concern us all. I say "obvious aspects" because, as soon as I read them, I mentally agreed, as if they were obvious, as if anyone, with a minimum of reading and writing experience and a basic knowledge of today's publishing market, had long known what to expect.
The authors who confide in us these 4 aspects of publishing come from different countries, cultures, experiences and periods: Murakami Haruki (Japan, 1949), Scarlett Thomas (England, 1972) and Giampaolo Pansa (Italy, 1935). There are too many of us writing The number of Special Data novelists has no limits, but the space in bookstores does. The craft of the writer, Murakami Haruki This essay by Murakami Haruki has been one of several books on writing that I have read over the years. I didn't find them all useful – although the most interesting one was Stephen King's On Writing – but I found something useful in all of them. The Japanese writer's sentence is striking for its truthful simplicity.
It is a geometric truth and geometry, being the daughter of mathematics, is not an opinion. The number of novelists – I also call them that because when someone says they are a writer, in 99% of cases they are a writer of novels, of fiction, therefore a novelist – the number of novelists is growing more and more and this is noticeable every day. New authors contact me via email, comment on the blog, write to me on Instagram , the social network that I thought was least suitable for creative writing. There are a lot of people out there who write. Too much? It's not up to us to say, fortunately there is still freedom to be and feel like writers and to try to become one.
The authors who confide in us these 4 aspects of publishing come from different countries, cultures, experiences and periods: Murakami Haruki (Japan, 1949), Scarlett Thomas (England, 1972) and Giampaolo Pansa (Italy, 1935). There are too many of us writing The number of Special Data novelists has no limits, but the space in bookstores does. The craft of the writer, Murakami Haruki This essay by Murakami Haruki has been one of several books on writing that I have read over the years. I didn't find them all useful – although the most interesting one was Stephen King's On Writing – but I found something useful in all of them. The Japanese writer's sentence is striking for its truthful simplicity.
It is a geometric truth and geometry, being the daughter of mathematics, is not an opinion. The number of novelists – I also call them that because when someone says they are a writer, in 99% of cases they are a writer of novels, of fiction, therefore a novelist – the number of novelists is growing more and more and this is noticeable every day. New authors contact me via email, comment on the blog, write to me on Instagram , the social network that I thought was least suitable for creative writing. There are a lot of people out there who write. Too much? It's not up to us to say, fortunately there is still freedom to be and feel like writers and to try to become one.