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Adventure Travel Writer
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Learn to
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Books for
Freelance Writers Freelance writers are lucky today. Look at the rows of books on writing, creative process, marketing and publishing. Books by Natalie Goldberg, Anne Lamott and Julia Cameron urge prospective writers to try their wings. Writers support magazines and websites supplement the how-to-write books issued every year. Ive written one myself, on travel writing. There wasnt such an array of books for writers when I started freelancing back in 1972. You wrote your piece, checked in Writers Market for a likely periodical, sent a query or the manuscript out and crossed your fingers or chewed your nails. Targeting a magazine and honing style and length for a particular market were evolving concepts for freelancers. I suppose we still hurl our work and ideas into the unknown, but the process is faster now. And theres certainly lots more information available to help a freelancer. During the years Ive been writing on a freelance basis, Ive often turned to books for help with the mechanics and for inspiration. Early on, I found a copy of Freelance Forever: Successful Self-Employment, by Marietta Whittlesey, Avon Books, 1982. The title was reassuring; this freelance writing experiment could pan out. Other people did it--forever. Though dated in some aspects (information on taxes and insurance is rusty and the internet was just a gleam in the Pentagons eye when the books was written), the tips for setting up a workspace, securing contracts or collecting debts are timeless. Whittleseys common sense advice for nurturing the psyche while working alone resonates with any freelancer. Another guide for writers that Ive read and underlined is The Independent Scholars Handbook, by Ronald Gross, Addison-Wesley Publishing, 1983. It presents enduring information on how to navigate the fiords of academe. The issue of a writers time is always sensitive. Now that I hold a day job as a diplomat, write freelance and teach writing, allocating private time for writing is my most difficult assignment. Other freelance writers tell similar stories. Friends rarely understand that wed rather be actively researching a project than going to movie or some other spectator event. And a freelancers work hours occasionally defy circadian rhythms, which can annoy housemates. Most writers need assistance with style and grammar. I steer towards handbooks that will entertain me as I improve my spelling and rhetoric. You may open a copy of Usage and Abusage by Eric Partridge, Penguin Books, 1963 with a smirk -- the title suggests arcane bondage techniques--but this always amusing reference book proffers clever definitions of linguistics that will gloss your writing with a patina of British diction. Here you can learn that a group of leopards is a leap and teeming with is incorrect for rich in. Seven entries for like suggest to me the prevalence of that word in the unconsidered speech of the young or illiterate is not unique to our times, because the book was first published in 1947. I regularly revisit the silky prose in William Zinssers On Writing Well and William Strunk and E. B. Whites The Elements of Style. Other useful technical no-nonsense texts include a Thesaurus, the OED, several foreign language and specialty dictionaries, the Associated Press Style Book, Chicago Manual of Style and the Prentice Hall Handbook for Writers. After organizing an office, nailing
down a contract, marking off time, and checking your grammar, whats left but
inspiration. I dip into a writers diary
or a collection of an authors letters to remind myself that writing has never been
easy and creative people must forever nurture themselves and each other. Self-direction, the essence of the freelancing life, invites constant renewal. Helpful books for psychological motivation include Zen in the Art of Writing by Ray Bradbury, Capra Press, 1990, Letters From the Earth, Mark Twain, Fawcett Crest, 1942. If You Want to Write: A Book about Art, Independence and Spirit by Brenda Ueland, Graywolf Press, 1987, Women & Writing, Virginia Woolf, The Womens Press, 1979, Reading and Writing, Robertson Davies, Univ. of Utah Press, 1992, and The Art of Fiction: Notes on Craft for Young Writers, by John Gardner, 1983. This article was originally published in WordHouse, January, 2000.
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