|
The Courage to Write:
How Writers Transcend Fear

Click
here to read interviews with Ralph about writing.
Anxiety is routine among anyone who dares to
put pen to paper, or fingers to keyboard. Yet it's rarely addressed in
books about writing. The Courage to Write confronts this topic head-on.
Ralph Keyes's message is not that one shouldn't be scared. Rather, his
book treats fear as a normal, inevitable part of the writing process.
Keyes illustrates this point by showing how successful writers deal with
what he calls "page fright." "I have to talk myself into bravery with
every sentence," admitted Cynthia Ozick.
In The Courage to Write,
Ralph Keyes shows that anxiety is felt by writers at every level.
Drawing on 30 years as an author and writing teacher, Keyes argues that
this is inevitable. In his words, "Anxiety is a normal, manageable, and
even a useful part of the writing process."
A normal fear of writing
can be transcended. Doing so first calls for identifying the fears of
those learning to write. Among them are: fear of self-revelation, fear
of being criticized, and fear of self-discovery. Topics covered in The
Courage to Write include:
-
Why it's so hard to
face the blank page.
-
Procrastination: the
"as soon as" syndrome. ("As soon as ________, I'm going to get some
writing done.")
-
False fear-busters.
True courage-boosters.
-
How writers use
obfuscation to soothe writing nerves. Helping new ones to learn the
courage to write clearly.
-
Confronting anxiety
about the opinion of important others ("What's Mom gonna think?").
Peer fear. Censors-in-Chief.
-
Converting the fear of
writing into excitement.
The Courage to Write is
also a powerful motivator. The book's author, said one reader, "wrote
this for me, and in many ways, about me."
|