by Susan Reichert
The
University of Mississippi once invited William Faulkner to the English department to address one class per day for a week.
Faulkner devoted the entire time to answering the students' questions.
When
asked what is the best training one should have for writing he said,
“Read, read, read. Read everything – classics, good or bad, trash; see how
they do it. When a carpenter learns his trade, he does so by observing.
Read! You’ll absorb it. Write. If it is good, you’ll find out. If it’s
not, throw it out the window.”
Good advice. Writers are always seeking out ways to learn how to write. Reading is one of the easiest ways to learn how to write. You learn by observing. By reading, you are observing.
Faulkner
was asked another question. The students wanted to know if it was good
to copy a style. His answer was somewhat profound. “If you have
something to say, use your own style: it will choose its own type of
telling, its own style.”
Of
course, these are only two of the pieces of advice he doled out to the
students, but I think by far they were the most useful for a budding
writer. Don’t you? “Use your own style" and "read, read, read.”
What would your answers have been to the students?
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