By Sharon May
My writing has taken two forms over the years -- academic essays and
fiction. In pursing degrees in English and American Literature at the
undergraduate and graduate levels, I’ve written at least fifty academic essays.
At one point in my life, I was very good at writing them, winning writing awards
at two graduate schools.
I was so proficient at writing academic essays, I didn’t have to revise to
earn an A. I revised one 20-page paper when I was required to do a ten minute
reading of it. Honestly, that was the only academic paper I ever revised.
So as an academic writer, I never really learned to revise my own words,
which is ironic since as an instructor of writing, I help students revise their
writing all the time. I can explain the concepts and steps in revision, but
rarely applied that knowledge to my own writing.
For the past two summers, I have begun writing fiction again. During that
time, I have had to learn how to revise. At first, I wasn’t sure where to
start, and finally with one story, I decided to imagine I didn’t even have a
draft and start a new version of the story. That kick-started my revising. As one
can imagine, my writing has improved dramatically. Belonging to the writer’s
workshop has given me ideas and guidance for revision so I look forward to the
meetings.
One benefit of revising is that now when I’m drafting something new, I’m
questioning myself as if I’m already revising. This has helped prevent mistakes
I would have previously produced. So far, drafting this way has not interfered
with the flow of ideas from brain to paper, and therefore I take this as
positive growth in my writing process.
In my journey into revision, I started reading online articles about revising
fiction. While reading, I came across “12 Writing Fiction Checklists”
on the website Fiction Notes. I have
found these checklists useful to help me evaluate my writing, which leads to
new possibilities.
Of all the quotes I’ve read online about revising, I think Colette (Casual
Chance, 1964) reveals the power of revision best when she says, “Put down
everything that comes into your head and then you’re a writer. But an author is
one who can judge his own stuff’s worth, without pity, and destroy most of it.”
2 comments:
Sharon, a good reminder about editing, which is a different process from writing. I have come to realize that when I think I've written something really meaningful, it's usually drivel and belongs in the garbage.
Amen to that.
Post a Comment