Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
A writer always writes.
A migraine is the cockblock of writing.
Nothing says work efficiency like panic mode.
A day of bad writing is always better than a day of no writing.
It's my belief that people enter your life at exactly the right time.
Writing a story, regardless of length, begins always with a single word.
The recipe for great art has always been misery and a good bowel movement.
Always mystify, torture, mislead, and surprise the audience as much as possible.
Nothing's a better cure for writer's block than to eat ice cream right out of the carton.
Fear and self-doubt are the deadly enemies of creativity. Don’t invite either into your mind.
If you treat your characters like people, they'll reward you by being fully developed individuals.
But people in a small town tend to do a lot of talking, even when they don’t know what they’re talking about.
Always work with/surround yourself with people who help make you a better version of you. Kindly avoid those who don't.
You can be a writer who doesnt read everyday. But youre not fooling anyone. It shows, rather embarrassingly, in your work.
Regarding the creative: never assume you're the master, only the student. Your audience will determine if you're masterful.
Writers often torture themselves trying to get the words right. Sometimes you must lower your expectations and just finish it.
It’s hard to land a devastating jab/cross/hook/uppercut combo to your reader’s imagination when you’re telegraphing your punches.
When you're writing what you love, it's the most fun you can have with your clothing still on, unless of course, you write naked.
Authors must spend months, years making fantasy believable in a single work while reality runs rampant and complete chaos elsewhere.
Write about the thing that scares you most or your most private confession and you'll never have a problem coming up with decent fiction.
Any conversation including the mention of Roald Dahl, Ray Bradbury, or Emily Dickinson is one worth getting into or at least eavesdropping.
When you print out your manuscript and read it, marking up with a pen, it sometimes feels like a criminal returning to the scene of a crime.
Love it when a compelling new character kicks open your mental door, tracks mud across your brain, and props their feet up on your cerebrum.
There is no right or wrong way to write a novel. Each journey is different for every individual work and for every writer. The first error is never to begin; the second is never to finish.
If you focus on the humanity of your stories, your characters, then the horror will be stronger, scarier. Without the humanity, the horror becomes nothing more than a tawdry parlor trick. All flash and no magic, and worst of all, no heart.