How to Ensure your Reading is Helping Your Writing by Daphne Gray-Grant

By admin
In Writers
Jan 15th, 2013
0 Comments
1611 Views

readingWhen people ask me the one thing they can do to improve their writing and I tell them to read more, I often receive shocked looks in return. Is it really that simple?

Well, no, of course it isn’t. But reading — and reading well — can make a huge difference to your writing life. Here are ten tips to ensure you’re doing it right:

  1. Be sure to read only those books you enjoy. There’s no honour in plowing through Charles Dickens if he bores you senseless. Ditto for Albert Camus, Jane Austen and Ernest Hemingway. Your life is not an English 100 class — and reading “obligatory” novels you don’t like will only make you feel trapped. If you enjoy Jane Austen (as I do), well, sure, read her. But if you don’t, well, don’t. I promise you that no reading taskmaster is ever going to call you to account. Reading should be a pleasure. Read what you like so you read more, not less!
  2. Read only a limited amount of crap. Tip #1 notwithstanding, you should read only small amounts of badly written material. The reason? You will start to sound like the authors you read. Bottom line: a little bit of People Magazine is okay as is a small amount of authors like John Grisham, who write for plot, not finely crafted sentences. But mainly try to stick with writers whom you honestly admire.
  3. Read the kind of writing you aspire to produce yourself. If you’re a marketing writer, find the very best marketing writers out there and devour their work. If you produce annual reports, scour the world for the most interesting best-written annual reports in history and read them! Perhaps you have a non-fiction book you want to produce? Read a plethora of non-fiction books until you find a model you want to emulate. This type of reading is never wasted time!
  4. Never feel obliged to finish material you don’t like. I don’t know about you, but I’ve always had a hard time walking away from things I’ve started and haven’t finished. Nevertheless, I’ve now learned to close the covers on books that don’t “grab” me quickly enough. For example, I recently tried Ilustrado by Miguel Syjuco. Although the book had earned rave reviews, by about page 80, I still wasn’t engaged. So I returned it to the library. True, I couldn’t regain the time lost reading 80 pages I didn’t enjoy. But this was less “costly” than reading 320 pages I disliked!
  5. Keep a record of what you have read. I have kept a book journal for the last 20 years. I don’t always remember to record every single book but I try really hard. My journal used to be a spiral-bound notebook; I switched to a computer-based record about five years ago. I record the name of the book, its author, the publishing year, the first sentence of the book (sometimes a bit more) and one or two of my own thoughts. It takes me less than five minutes and I cannot tell you how many times this record has proven to be inordinately useful.
  6. Have a good system for tracking the names of books you want to read. I like to have my “future reading” list with me at all times, so I’ve created three entries in the address book of my iPhone:
    • Books, fiction
    • Books, nonfiction
    • Books, young adult

    As the iPhone is always in my purse or pocket, this allows to me pop into any bookstore without planning! When possible, I prefer to buy books for my Kindle but having the list in one portable, electronic place is still incredibly handy.

  7. Ask other people what they’re reading. This is a great opening gambit at a party! It gives you something intelligent to talk about (much more interesting than “what’s your job?”) and it may help you uncover other book lovers. I made a lifelong friend with that question at a party 20 years ago.
  8. Give yourself a goal. What’s worth pursuing is always measurable. For years, I’ve had an annual goal of reading at least one book a week. For every long book (I read all 983 pages of Ken Follet’s doorstopper Pillars of the Earth this summer) I allow myself one skinny one. (This year it was Paul Harding’s tiny and beautifully written book, Tinkers, which won the 2010 Pulitzer for fiction.)
  9. If you’re a “joiner” consider a book club. I’m no longer a member of a book club because I dislike being told what to read — especially when there’s a deadline. If a book club works for you, well, be sure to join one. I’ve heard there are some clubs where you don’t read assigned books – you just talk about what you’ve been reading. That appeals even to me!
  10. Give books away when you’re finished. I’m a firm believer that our lives shouldn’t be filled with stuff we don’t need. When my husband and I rebuilt our house last year we went through two massive book “thinnings.” I’ve kept a small bookshelf of reference works and books about writing, and a handful of books I adore, but everything else I give to friends when I’m done.

© Daphne Gray-Grant who is the author of 8 1/2 Steps to Writing Faster, Better.  Daphne Gray-Grant is The Publication Coach and you can access her book and sign up for her VERY helpful (Meggin’s comment) weekly newsletter at Publication Coach.  Writers will find her site, materials, and coaching helpful.

gap_guide_write_better_write_faster_and_yes_write_more_easily_perspective_newWhether you write for pleasure, to discover, to get paid, as a part of your work, as a way to instruct, or for any other purpose, streamlining your writing process is essential. The Get a Plan! Guide® to Writing Better, Faster, & (Yes!) More Easily: Tools, Tricks, Tips, Techniques, Tactics, & More for Propelling Your Writing Productivity.

Inside this essential Get a Plan! Guide, you’ll find nearly 70 practical, easy-to-implement ideas that will propel your writing productivity.

Pin It on Pinterest