Terry Brooks Quotes About Writing

We have collected for you the TOP of Terry Brooks's best quotes about Writing! Here are collected all the quotes about Writing starting from the birthday of the Writer – January 8, 1944! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 20 sayings of Terry Brooks about Writing. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
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  • The more complex and overwhelming the threat to a protagonist, the better the opportunity for the author to create a compelling conflict and a dramatic resolution.

    Terry Brooks (2003). “Sometimes the Magic Works: Lessons from a Writing Life”, p.102, Del Rey
  • If you do not love what you do, if you are not appropriately grateful for the chance to create something magical each time you sit down at the computer or with a pencil and paper in hand, somewhere along the way your writing will betray you.

    Terry Brooks (2003). “Sometimes the Magic Works: Lessons from a Writing Life”, p.165, Del Rey
  • What you write chooses you.

    Writing  
  • After all, you put a lot into creating a universe and everything that goes with it, and it seems a shame to use it only once.

    Writing   Creating   Use  
  • The muse whispers to you when she chooses, and you can't tell her to come back later, because you quickly learn in this business that she might not come back at all.

    Writing   Might   Muse  
    Terry Brooks (2003). “Sometimes the Magic Works: Lessons from a Writing Life”, p.14, Del Rey
  • If you do not hear music in your words, you have put too much thought into your writing and not enough heart.

    Terry Brooks (2003). “Sometimes the Magic Works: Lessons from a Writing Life”, p.163, Del Rey
  • You can get away with breaking all of the other rules at least once in a while, but you can't get away with breaking this one. Readers will accept almost anything from you if you don't make them feel they have wasted their time and money. Remember, you can bore readers in a lot of different ways. It doesn't necessarily take a dearth of action; too much action can get you the same result. Everything in writing, like in life, requires balance.

    Terry Brooks (2003). “Sometimes the Magic Works: Lessons from a Writing Life”, p.116, Del Rey
  • Fiction writers are strange beasts. They are, like all writers, observers first and foremost. Everything that happens to and around them is potential material for a story, and they look at it that way.

    Writing   Looks   Fiction  
    Terry Brooks (2003). “Sometimes the Magic Works: Lessons from a Writing Life”, p.24, Del Rey
  • If you don't think there is magic in writing, you probably won't write anything magical.

    Terry Brooks (2003). “Sometimes the Magic Works: Lessons from a Writing Life”, p.165, Del Rey
  • If you are ever completely satisfied with something you have written, you are setting your sights too low. But if you can't let go of your material even after you have done the best that you can with it, you are setting your sights too high.

    Terry Brooks (2003). “Sometimes the Magic Works: Lessons from a Writing Life”, p.165, Del Rey
  • There is much to admire in Peter Brett's writing, and his concept is brilliant. There's action and suspense all the way.

    Writing   Suspense   Way  
  • There is poetry in fiction. If you cannot see it and feel it when you write, you need to step back and examine what you are doing wrong. If you have not figured out how to write a simple declarative sentence and make it sing with that poetry, you are not yet ready to write an entire book.

    Book   Writing   Simple  
    Terry Brooks (2003). “Sometimes the Magic Works: Lessons from a Writing Life”, p.164, Del Rey
  • What I want to write about has changed somewhat, and the scope of the storytelling has changed accordingly.

  • On the other hand, I still approach each book with the same basic plan in mind - to put some people under severe stress and see how they hold up.

    Stress   Book   Writing  
  • Writing fantasy lets me imagine a great deal more than, say, writing about alligators, and lets me write about places more distant than Florida, but I can tell you things about Florida and alligators, let you make the connection all on your own.

  • Fiction writing is a twenty-four-hou r-a-day occupation. You never leave your work behind. It is always with you, and to some extent, you are always thinking about it. You don't take your work home; your work never leaves home. It lives inside you. It resides and grows and comes alive in your mind.

    Home   Writing   Thinking  
  • This is for writers yet to be published who think the uphill climb will never end. Keep believing. This is also for published writers grown jaded by the process. Remember how lucky you are.

    Terry Brooks (2003). “Sometimes the Magic Works: Lessons from a Writing Life”, p.9, Del Rey
  • I would also argue that there is a good chance that an outline will help you stave off any onslaught of writer's block. Let me advise you right up front that I am not a big believer in writer's block. I think writer's block is God's way of telling you one of two things - that you failed to think your material through sufficiently before you started writing, or that you need a day or two off with your family and friends.

    Terry Brooks (2003). “Sometimes the Magic Works: Lessons from a Writing Life”, p.76, Del Rey
  • If anything in your life is more important than writing - anything at all - you should walk away now while you still can. Forewarned is forearmed. For those who cannot or will not walk away, you need only to remember this. Writing is life. Breathe deeply of it.

    Terry Brooks (2003). “Sometimes the Magic Works: Lessons from a Writing Life”, p.165, Del Rey
  • Lester del Rey told me repeatedly that the first and most important part of writing fiction is just to think about the story. Don't write anything down. Don't try to pull anything together right away. Just dream for a while and see what happens. There isn't any timetable involved, no measuring stick for how long it ought to take. For each book, it is different. But that period of thinking, of reflection, is crucial to how successful your story will turn out to be.

    Dream   Book   Writing  
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Terry Brooks quotes about: Books Cats Giving Imagination Magic Writing