Writers are fed a bevy of mantras—“show don’t tell,” “kill your darlings”—which provide the security that there are rules, but little else. A new book by Lucy Ives offers a more expansive view of writing advice.
Not going to click a link with so little description, but I will take a guess.
First though, what is “writing advice”? Shouldn’t it be “instruction” or “training”?
As to why it’s weird: Creative processes aren’t linear. And each writer will have unique aspects of their process. These personalized parts may or may not work for anyone else since everyone is different.
because this is a new yorker article who are supreme normies who think everything is weird. i mean - you don’t read new yorker for valuable information. it’s for the lulz at these normy tryhards.
Not going to click a link with so little description, but I will take a guess.
First though, what is “writing advice”? Shouldn’t it be “instruction” or “training”?
As to why it’s weird: Creative processes aren’t linear. And each writer will have unique aspects of their process. These personalized parts may or may not work for anyone else since everyone is different.
because this is a new yorker article who are supreme normies who think everything is weird. i mean - you don’t read new yorker for valuable information. it’s for the lulz at these normy tryhards.