One: Write What You Know

One: Write What You Know

A Lesson by Belator Books
"

If you don't know it, research it until you do.

"


"Write what you know... please."

In my high school English class our borderline-highbrow teacher would feelingly repeat the above phrase after giving each assignment. "I am thoroughly tired," he would continue, "Of reading of spacemen and dragons and soldiers and knights who are baseless shadows of what they could be."

Therein lies the juicy meat of this particular point: writing some slip-shod, ill-researched poor example of a book not only tortures the reader but flings a blot onto the face of Literature, itself. Well-read audiences groan upon reading tripe; their lament is not only for the wasted time but for the literary crime of ruining a character's potential with ignorant writing. When a writer knows the subject and characters of his/her book well, it shows. Likewise, even the most rudimentary readers can discern when said author is talking through their hat, or "writing by the seat of their pants". Even science-fiction writers (and fantasy writers) must research weaponry/scientific details and read voraciously of fellow and past writers' work in order that their book comes off with a measure of credence. Writing what you know is the main difference between a good book and a laughingly terrible one.

There are a variety of ways this can be accomplished; the easiest by far is personal experience. Writing your own story (or that of those close to you) allows one to grasp and pen accurate detail, correctly quoted responses to questions, the nuances of human expression and scenes can be thus painted with startlingly-familiar shades. My first fiction novel was based on the lives of real people, though mixed around a bit; pieces of the lives of one set of friends and family were selected and attached to those of others, well-spiced with carefully-researched details.

In many cases research can stand in where personal experience fails. For instance, I spent a solid month just counting out blocks from one location in my book to another, estimating--using different circumstances and Google Maps--just how long it would take the characters to get from point A to B, as well as discovering what state they'd arrive in. Some long-standing natives of the city mentioned were consulted and I was elated to find that the research I'd done was accurate. Said folks were also pivotal in providing local euphemisms to place the scene without having to constantly refer to the city's name.

Standing observation is the next method in line to aid in 'knowing' a scene or character, and by it have many good details enhanced past books. Such activity can be as simple as sitting on a park bench and watching folks walk by, taking note of their expressions, body language and clothes. This method is a bit more difficult than personal experience and research, as the observer/writer is left wondering about the lives of the people in the witnessed scene. A goodly amount of creative guessing is then needed in order to 'fill in the blanks', but that is part of the fun of writing and helps the observations notated translate into character personality, scene details and real actions.

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Comments

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Posted 11 Years Ago


How about...write what you know about what you don't know?

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Posted 11 Years Ago


My very first major work is about a man who becomes an outcast in his town. I know about this. He decides to escape. I know about this. He finds himself in a strange land and must learn new customs. I know about this as well. I research the historical aspects since it is a story set in the past (1910) and use names of real towns and businesses in the towns and cities we visit. I make sure events happen the way they really did in the past and reference known historical events. I think I'm doing pretty good. I'll post more of what I've written soon so others can give me pointers.

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Posted 11 Years Ago


I've been reading through my most recent writing, comparing it to my writing from 2 years back...Back then, I wrote about what I thought would make an awesome movie. Now, I write about what I know. Most of which from research....still, it does come easier when you're writing about what you've been researching for months.

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Posted 12 Years Ago


I went through my past writing, having woke up early at 3:00 am. I threw out 3 quarters of everything, including much that I had posted in my prior user name (kmartell). I may "publish" whats left sometime which would be fine. However, I came to the conclusion that (like this essay above) I had continued to strike out because I had not plainly stated what I know, had not done much, if any rewriting, and most of the stories and poems I wrote were "okay".....however I think most of the writing was not close to any reality I had ever experienced. Trying to be "intellectual" or what have you, was a big waste of time.
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joy

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Posted 12 Years Ago



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Posted 12 Years Ago


I would argue with the "write what you know" because I think if you always stick with what you know, you'll never grow as a writer. I didn't understand how powerful a death scene could be until I actually wrote it out, because I'd never experieced it first-hand before. I don't KNOW how people react in a romantic relationship---but I write about it anyway, in an attempt to learn what it's actually like. Also: If we all write only what we know, there wouldn't be dragons, or ghosts, or fairies, or aliens and that stuff. That is imagination. we don't always know our imaginations...they are simply there.

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Posted 12 Years Ago


The most endearing words in my life come from a writer that is telling me a story. It has a powerful beginning, middle and end. To write about gathering eggs as a child or spacemen, the characters, scenes and so on must develop. Being real is what we are talking about, not someone elses better. Being your own best is where we are going. I don't want to write about spacemen, but someone else has a talent for this. I am working to draw pictures and endear you to my characters. I never feel that I have completely gotten there. Maybe we should quit if we feel like we have reached the peak.

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Posted 12 Years Ago


When it says to write what you know, I disagree. I mean, in order to become better, you must first write what you know and then venture into the unknown.

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Posted 12 Years Ago


Thanks for your help! One really good thing as you get older, is the experience that is real and powerful. I have done a lot in my past and I'm using it!
I need to know if I write about other people in my life that have told me their lives, is it a problem?
One more thing.....Three characters in the same family use one-liners from movies or anything they all three know about. Is this a problem?
Thanks again
Faith

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Posted 12 Years Ago


I don't want to be rude whatsoever, and I'm NOT trying to start a fight, please, but I think the phrase "write what you know" is for unimaginative people. Of people wrote what they knew, we wouldn't have fantasy or sci-fi or some of the most popular books in the world. But I'm glad you said "Write what you know or research until you know it"

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Belator Books
Belator Books

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About
The Styles are two fiction writers with day jobs. Married 17 years, 4 children and an organic garden. Twitter: @BelatorBooks & @writerlrstyles WordPress Blogs: www.lrstyles.wordpress.com www..