Transcript

DEREK NEALE:
You’re nearly there! Welcome to week 7 of Start Writing Fiction.
As we’ve seen, reading is an all-important way of feeding your own work. What you’ve started to do is read as a writer.
Seeing how other people do things is invaluable. Writing without reading is to write in the dark: it might work, but it’s a handicap.
Being well-read isn’t just about quantity but more a question of immersion, and familiarising yourself with how books feel.
Reading is another way of developing the ‘habit’ of writing.
Books are a great comfort to any writer: you can see how others have faced the same problems you face.
When you’re reading as a writer, even people’s ‘mistakes’ are invaluable. If you think a book doesn’t work, just articulating why will be useful.
This week we’ll hear from authors Louis de Bernières, Patricia Duncker and Alex Garland talking about the importance of reading.
You’ll get to write a review of a book or story you’ve enjoyed, as well as reading an extract from Toni Morrison’s novel Jazz.
You’ll hone your critical and editing skills. And you’ll start editing and redrafting your final story.