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03f3c38 Kill your darlings, kill your darlings, even when it breaks your egocentric little scribbler's heart, kill your darlings. writing deleting revising editing kill Stephen King
a45de34 When you write a book, you spend day after day scanning and identifying the trees. When you're done, you have to step back and look at the forest. writing revisions critical-thinking editing Stephen King
5a8bacd Authors who moan with praise for their editors always seem to reek slightly of the Stockholm syndrome. authorship editing Christopher Hitchens
4d5cfce Merely because you have got something to say that may be of interest to others does not free you from making all due effort to express that something in the best possible medium and form. writing editing Jack London
91d638b There is a kind of gaping admiration that would fain roll Shakespeare and Bacon into one, to have a bigger thing to gape at; and a class of men who cannot edit one author without disparaging all others. shakespeare conflation francis-bacon editing exaggeration Robert Louis Stevenson
ee246c7 "An editor doesn't just read, he reads , and reading well is a creative, powerful act. The ancients knew this and it frightened them. Mesopotamian society, for instance, did not want great reading from its scribes, only great writing. Scribes had to submit to a curious ruse: they had to downplay their reading skills lest they antagonize their employer. The Attic poet Menander wrote: "those who can read see twice as well." Ancient autocrats did not want their subjects to see that well. Order relied on obedience, not knowledge and reflection. So even though he was paid to read as much as write messages, the scribe's title cautiously referred to writing alone ( = "to write"); and the symbol for Nisaba, the Mesopotamian goddess of scribes, was not a tablet but a stylus. In his excellent book , Alberto Manguel writes, "It was safer for a scribe to be seen not as one who interpreted information, but who merely recorded it for the public good." In their fear of readers, ancients understood something we have forgotten about the magnitude of readership. Reading breeds the power of an independent mind. When we read well, we are thinking hard for ourselves--this is the essence of freedom. It is also the essence of editing. Editors are scribes liberated to not simply record and disseminate information, but think hard about it, interpret, and ultimately, influence it." reading writing editing revision freedom-of-thought thought writers Susan Bell