Guest Post: For Love of Writing by Donna VanLiere

For Love of Writing

Donna VanLiere

The Christmas Journey

www.donnavanliere.com

At every writer’s seminar or symposium you’ll hear someone from a publishing house or literary agency say to write about you love or what you know.  Red Smith, the first sportswriter to win the Pulitzer Prize, said, “There’s nothing to writing.  All you do is sit down at a typewriter and open a vein.”  That’s easier said than done and impossible to do unless you’re pouring your heart into the words and writing about you know.

It’s those books, the ones that come from the place of knowing that are the ones worth reading—ones where the writer poured herself into the writing.  Those are the novels that touch the reader to the core, prompting her to care more deeply or give more generously.  Those are the stories that reach the far places of the reader’s heart making her angry at injustice or more passionate about the homeless.  Eloquence and style have their place but for my money I’d rather read a book that was written with passion because it’s within those pages that I feel something.

In Hebrew, the word dabar means both word and action.  A good book shouldn’t just say something but make you feel something.  When I give a book away as a gift it’s always because the book did something to me.  As a writer, you should always ask yourself, “What do I want the reader to feel?” because it’s not all about the words.  There’s more.  There’s helping the reader feel a little wiser, a little less alone, a little less afraid, a heap more grateful, a little more understanding, patient or loving, a bit more human and a lot more alive.  Those are the books worth reading and the only ones worth writing.