From the category archives:

perfection

Perfection - part 2

by brianlburns on 18 November 2008

in great writing, perfection

In Part 1, I said that writing can be perfect. In Part 2, I’ll talk about how to get there. This is dangerous territory though, if for no other reason than every writer is different. Some write best in secluded silence, others write best blasting AC/DC. Some write 30 pages a day, others write 10 words a day (Joyce is famous for this). Some write when the mood strikes, and some write everyday, for a certain number of hours. The point is, there are a lot of different styles that produce a lot of different types of good writing.

But I will argue here that one style, or one tool, is the key to perfect writing… no matter what type of writer you are. Those who read the blog will probably be unalarmed to hear that it centers on revision, and on writing out loud.

I think, as I said in part 1, that a certain set of words has a harmonious center - a certain combination of look and feel, timing and meaning, that’s right. Given this, It’d be presumptuous for any writer to assume that they’ll get it right on the first try, every time. It just doesn’t happen like that. Not in athletics, not in chemistry, and not in writing. If you want perfect writing, you have to work for it.

Some of your revisions can happen on paper, on screen, or in your head. But I believe it’s essential, at some point (preferably in the end), to read your writing out loud. The act of saying it, not to mention hearing it out in the world allows you the chance to truly evaluate it. It is then that you either hear disharmony or harmony, and then, depending on your motivation, that you choose to go on or revise again.

Training your ear takes time, but it’s not a magical skill. It’s an inherent one… available to any writer who wants to use it. Which brings me back to the question I ended with in Part 1: if it’s just a little work, and there’s such a high reward, why would you settle for anything less?

{ 0 comments }

Perfection - part 1

by brianlburns on 13 November 2008

in great writing, perfection

Writing can be perfect. That is a fact. And it’s a well-kept secret.

What do I mean by perfect? Obviously, I’m not talking about words fitting into some sort of pre-designed mathematical formula, or words fitting into someone else’s perception of what they should be. I’m talking about words that come together harmoniously, according to your own internal indicators… like a universal truth so amazing it can only be divine (almost everyone has encountered this at some point, I think).

Obviously, not every action we take in this world brings us this sort of harmony, and in the same way, nor does every word bring us the writing equivalent. But with hard work, a little luck, and some more hard work, selected pieces of your writing can.

I’ll get to the how-to in the next section, but for now, I’ll end with a question: now that you know writing can be perfect, and that your brand is formed partially by your copy… why would you settle for anything less?

{ 1 comment }